Science & technology | Hot air

Academic writing is getting harder to read—the humanities most of all

We analyse two centuries of scholarly work

A student studies on his laptop with notes covering whiteboards.
Photograph: Getty Images

Academics have long been accused of jargon-filled writing that is impossible to understand. A recent cautionary tale was that of Ally Louks, a researcher who set off a social media storm with an innocuous post on X celebrating the completion of her PhD. If it was Ms Louks’s research topic (“olfactory ethics”—the politics of smell) that caught the attention of online critics, it was her verbose thesis abstract that further provoked their ire. In two weeks, the post received more than 21,000 retweets and 100m views.

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This article appeared in the Science & technology section of the print edition under the headline “Hot air”

From the December 21st 2024 edition

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