Theory
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The proposal's theoretical section occupies a critical, but subsidiary
position in the proposal's text. You must at once demonstrate disciplinary
mastery, highlight critical theoretical debates, point to shortcomings
in existing research and approaches, and indicate how your work
will help fill the void. All without miring your proposal in a swamp
of disorienting sources, sub-themes, and subtleties. While the specifics
of a proposal's theoretical section must, of course, be determined
by a fellowship's requirements, the following points may prove helpful
in maintaining your focus and clarity.
Establish the context. The primary purpose of your theoretical
review is to demonstrate your familiarity with present intellectual
currents and concerns. Your review should not, however, be a general
survey of the field. Your discussion must quickly situate you and
your work within the context of the field's theoretical themes.
If you intend to conduct cross-disciplinary research, you should
highlight points of intersection between various theoretical fields
and justify why you are drawing on what some skeptics may consider
obscure sources. At all times, keep in mind that your theoretical
review must justify your research question and help determine your
research design.
Point out debates and disjuncture; expose the cracks and highlight
the payoffs. Your second primary task in reviewing existing
theory and literature is to justify the need for and interest in
your proposed research. Justification for research can come from
a variety of sources. At one level, new events or developments may
justify an empirical review of a long-accepted theory's empirical
foundations (e.g., why no democratization in places with a strong
middle class?). You may also highlight rival claims within the literature
of your field that can only be resolved through empirical work (e.g.,
some claim peasants are motivated by economic forces, others say
they are not). Regardless, attempt to highlight seeming paradoxes
or internal contradictions in the existing literature. Then demonstrate
how your work will contribute to their resolution.
Privilege elegance over expansiveness. Graduate students
tend to use the theory section as a thorough review of past approaches
while pointing to minor subtleties and differences. Unless yours
is a purely theoretical project, the theory section is intended
to provide only the foundation and justification for your research,
not a treatise on the theory itself. As with the rest of the proposal,
aim for a clear and democratic tone that is accessible without being
shallow.
Show your knowledge and expertise without being pedantic or dismissive.
As with the rest of the proposal, you must demonstrate your expertise
and qualifications without being dismissive of others' work and
ideas. (See also the section on style for more on tone). Many students
stereotype or 'straw man' past approaches in an effort to highlight
weaknesses and shortcomings. Committee members may interpret the
too easy dismissal of previous works as lacking respect or appreciation
for the field. You also run the risk of offending committee members
who are attached to a particular approach or author. For all you
know, one of the people you criticize could be reviewing your proposal.
As Przeworski writes, "Good proposals demonstrate awareness
of alternative viewpoints and argue the author's position in such
a way as to address the field broadly, rather than developing a
single sectarian tendency indifferent to alternatives." Hyperbole
and hubris will, needless to say, go unappreciated. Without low-balling
your qualifications, avoid presenting yourself as your discipline's
savior or prophet.
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