Skip to product information
1 of 1

Embracing the Unknown

Regular price $127.95
Regular price $127.95 Sale price $127.95
Sold out
This book offers a candid and unflinching account of the PhD experience in a sector marked by precarity, insecurity, and intense competition. Throughout the volume, current and former PhD students ...
Read More
  • 15 July 2025
View Product Details

This book offers a candid and unflinching account of the PhD experience in a sector marked by precarity, insecurity, and intense competition. Throughout the volume, current and former PhD students reflect on their varied journeys, addressing challenges such as balancing study with family life, navigating ethical dilemmas and managing mental health.

The collection brings together a diverse range of voices from the PhD community, sharing personal thoughts, lived experiences, and 'in-the-moment' accounts of life as a doctoral candidate within the context of higher education.

By demystifying the PhD journey and offering valuable insights, this book serves as essential reading for both PhD students and their supervisors.

files/i.png Icon
Price: $127.95
Pages: 262
Publisher: Bristol University Press
Imprint: Policy Press
Publication Date: 15 July 2025
ISBN: 9781447373889
Format: Hardcover
BISACs: STUDY AIDS / Graduate School Guides, Study and learning skills: general, EDUCATION / Schools / Levels / Higher, REFERENCE / Research, Research methods / methodology, Higher education, tertiary education
REVIEWS Icon
‘The PhD journey isn’t easy and as the title of this book suggests, it can feel like a “step into the unknown”. So, for anyone still at the planning stage or already well on the road, seeking out advice and guidance about how to manage the route, avoid wrong turnings and make it to the end point is really worthwhile. This brilliant book presents personal accounts of the PhD experience in a way that readers are sure to find accessible, supportive and empowering.’ Nigel South, University of Essex

Sarah Jones is a Visiting Lecturer and a PhD Researcher in social sciences at Birmingham City University.

Mikhail Azad is a PhD Researcher in social sciences at Birmingham City University.

Liam Miles is a PhD researcher in social sciences at Birmingham City University.

Adam Lynes is an Associate Professor in social sciences at Birmingham City University.

Foreword - Sarah Pemberton

Introduction - Sarah Jones, Mikahil Azad, Liam Miles, and Adam Lynes

PART I

1. Re- entering academia: the unexpected journey - Sarah Jones

2. Entering the fray: the hyper-competitive PhD environment - Alexander Black

3. Conceptualising a PhD topic: navigating my way through academia - Mikahil Azad

4. New horizons: moving countries to start the PhD - Eliska Suchomel Duskova

5. From home to the unknown: applying for postgraduate study in the UK from the global south - Manikandan Soundararajan

Editor reflections on Part I

PART II

6. Navigating the depths of grief: a journey through grief while pursuing a PhD - Rio Waldock

7. Double duty: undertaking PhD research while being a full- time lecturer - Charlotte Rigby

8. Balancing act: balancing family life with the PhD - Suzanne Baggs

9. Managing the mind and PhD’ing - Abigail Shaw

Editor reflections on Part II

PART III

10. Safety in cultures of precarity: complex trauma and the value of ‘trauma-informed’ PhD supervision - Lisa Edge

11. Working for nothing: the exploitation of postgraduate students - Kyla Bavin

12. How close is too close? Ethical tensions and reflections in the Breddon Centre - Kavya Padmanabhan

13. Methodology unravelled: safely crossing the research minefield - Liam Miles

Editor reflections on Part III

PART IV

14. ‘Light at the end of the tunnel’: the Viva and beyond - Nick Gibbs

15. The whispers of doubt: ten years after the PhD and pervasive imposter syndrome - Adam Lynes

16. Fifteen years later, at the moral crossroads: retaining purpose and direction in the face of academic capitalism - Daniel Briggs

17. Mentoring moments: a collaborative reflection on supervision - Chelsea Braithwaite, Owen Hodgkinson, and James Treadwell

Editor reflections on Part IV

Conclusion - Sarah Jones, Mikahil Azad, Liam Miles, and Adam Lynes