Unlocking Creativity as a Researcher

In our next in-depth post, Lizzie O’Connor, Postgraduate Community Engagement Manager in the University Graduate School, digs into creativity in research and suggests some simple activities to help you get creative!

As a researcher, would you call yourself a creative? Would you classify research as a kind of creative endeavour? The notion of being a creative person might feel totally alien, even daunting.

A colourised image of Charles Darwin.
What would Charles Darwin do?
Image from Wikimedia Commons

In fact, you are utilising a whole range of creative skills every time you sit at your desk, arrive at your lab, or put pen to paper. Research requires us to wrestle with a question, to experiment, and to think outside of existing knowledge. Your supervisor may be encouraging you to bend the rules, to try new ways of doing things, to think outside the box. When you are writing up your thesis, you are finding patterns, playing with words in order to express ideas and discover. Sometimes the process of research can be messy, nonlinear, and nebulous; full of questions with no discernible answers, and solutions you have to find before you know they exist.

All this is, in short, being creative.

Some scholars may be encouraged by supervisors and mentors to embrace their creative skillset, and some may have interests or hobbies in creative fields, but most PhD researchers will not explore creativity as part of their training, or even be encouraged to frame their research in this way.

Often, the way we talk about research is to strip it of its creative elements. We aspire to publications, lists of conferences attended, points on a CV, funding attained. The current academic labour market means it is increasingly difficult to land a permanent job post-PhD, which skews our priorities towards the output rather than the process of our research. We all know that famous catchphrase, ‘Publish or Perish’, and it has huge implications for the way that we conduct research by emphasising productivity over play.

Yet, if we want a research culture that values originality, innovation, interdisciplinarity, and new ways of looking at problems, creativity is the most vital skill we can acquire and nurture as researchers. The best scholarly work strives to find new connections between fields, to identify new problems worth solving, to explain the previously unexplained, to solve problems that haven’t been solved before, to discover new ways of interpreting cultural or historical events, and to ultimately find new methods to understand the world. For all disciplines, novelty and innovation is at the heart of what and why we research, and underpins our success.

In this post, I explore notions of research creativity. We’ll look at some easy exercises, taking no more than 10 minutes, that can help us generate ideas and engage with our creative selves.

Being Creative

Creativity is generally defined as “the use of skill and imagination to produce something new“. Ambiguous and wide-reaching as this may seem, we can see the connections between creativity and the act of research in this meeting of ‘skill and imagination’. Think about how you came up with your PhD topic: you probably reflected on what you already knew, found gaps, and imagined how those gaps could be filled. You explored possible solutions to a problem, based on your own vast knowledge base and existing specialism, and landed on a novel, original approach to test your hypotheses.

The majority of creative scholars are self-taught, and we are already, through our every day practices of research, teaching this skill to ourselves. Being creative can look like being open to new ways of doing things, taking a break from the problem, working without presumptions and biased perceptions, experimenting, and not being afraid to make mistakes. But what would happen if we chose to consciously develop our creative selves, chose to think of ourselves as creatives, and used these skills to support our best research? We might find that our ideas multiply, or are honed into something more precise and usuable. We might spot new, original patterns and connections between our fields and others, or between research and industry. We can even use creative exercises to release our minds if we’re stuck on a problem, to silence our inner critic, and overcome mental blocks.

Below are three exercises proposed by artists, researchers and scholars which aim to engage and exercise your creative muscles through free-writing, play, and downtime, giving you the opportunity to hone and recognise your inherent creativity, and reconnect with your creative skills as a researcher.

Exercise One: Free Writing and ‘Morning Pages’

Beloved by creatives such as Alicia Keys, Patricia Cornwell and Pete Townsend, Julia Cameron’s 1992 creative workbook The Artist’s Way posits that short, daily creative practices can foster inspiration by emptying our minds and overcoming the doubts that might stand in the way of our most innovative thinking.

Cameron suggests writing three pages longhand at the start of each day, before trying any other work. No planning, no preparation, just free-writing with whatever is in your head, keeping pen to paper, until you come to the end of three notebook pages. You can write truly whatever passes through your mind: shopping lists, descriptions of the weather, thoughts, feelings, patterns and, hopefully, unexpected ideas.

Cameron recommends her morning page method as a way of gaining ‘confidence, security, enthusiasm and hopefully a little bit of frivolity’ for the rest of the day’s work. This stream-of-consciousness exercise is designed to override your internal censor and develop new ideas and perspectives. It works to empty your mind of its usual clutter, by writing down everything that’s in it, allowing for unconscious realisations and inspiration to emerge.

Exercise 2: The Importance of Play

Cameron’s ideal of ‘frivolity’ is, ironically, an important one. One of the biggest barriers to our work is the fear of getting it wrong, or a preoccupation with it being ‘perfect’.

But ideas can be very fun to mess around with, so long as we don’t take them too seriously. Many of us will remember how easily ideas came to us when we were children, and how openly we followed them. Whether it was an idea for a painting, an imaginative story, a playground game, we worried little about whether it would be ‘perfect’ and simply got on with the important business of trying it out.

In their 2021 text Creative Writing for Social Research : A Practical Guide, Richard Phillips and Helen Kara talk about the importance of warm-up exercises related to play, which support our writing by encouraging us to ignore our inner critic and enjoy the processing of putting words together. They suggest choosing one of the following exercises for 3-5 minutes before launching into what you really need to write (and deleting it as soon as it’s done!):

  • Write about your research from the point of view of a character in a novel
  • Write about your research from the point of view of an inanimate object connected with you or your work, such as: something you use for personal grooming, something you use at work, or something you always carry with you.
  • Write a short poem, such as a haiku or limerick or a short free verse, about the next stage of your research.
  • Put on some random music – from a selection on shuffle, or whatever a radio station happens to be playing. Write a few sentences about how the music makes you feel and think, then write about how that might link with your research.
  • Write an email or letter, to someone connected with your research, about anything you like. If there’s something bugging you about your research, write about that. Your language can be as ranty or rude as you please!
  • Write a fictional diary entry about an ideal day of research work. (pp. 26-27)

Exercise 3: Resting

Finally, I want to acknowledge the importance of rest in unlocking our creative brains.

Julia Cameron, for instance, proposes regular ‘artist’s dates’, time set aside to nurture ‘creative consciousness’ by engaging with art, reading a book, playing a videogame or watching a film. The idea is that your inner creative can only work if fed and nurtured by new ideas, but it also illustrates the importance of down-time for your brain in unlocking new ways of thinking and seeing.

The recent book Creativity in Research invites researchers to compare a day in their research life to one of Charles Darwin’s.

When he wasn’t sailing around the world in the HMS Beagle, Darwin spent only a few hours in dedicated work. The bulk of his day was spent writing letters, going on walks, resting on the sofa, or eating with his family. (p. 5) Darwin understood that allowing your mind to rest allowed it to generate and associate ideas in new ways. By distracting your conscious mind away from its worries and preoccupations, you leave room for unexpected connections and conclusions to strike. It’s an idea we have probably heard or experienced before – that inspiration strikes during a shower, just before falling sleep, when daydreaming, or on a commute – but it can be difficult to justify stepping away from your desk in order to work better. Next time you are tempted to skip your lunch break to continue working, you can ask yourself: what would Charles Darwin do?

Writing is part of the adventure

Amica Liburd, a PGR in the Department of Theology and Religion, attended many of the workshops as part of the Postgraduate Researcher Online Writing Summer School 2023, held 10-14 July. Here, she reflects on what she gained. To access recordings of all the workshops, enrol on the Canvas module.

A laptop on a laptop stand, with a flask, pad of paper and a pen, and a glasses case in front of a window.
Amica’s work desk

What if there is more to the PhD journey than simply writing a thesis? Participating in PROWSS2023 online workshops helped me to appreciate the value nurturing the skill of writing so that after years of “writing towards a thesis”, I can emerge as someone who can effectively communicate to others about the ideas that I am passionate about. Since starting the PhD journey in September 2020, I’ve wanted to dedicate a week to attending this annual workshop. Back then it seemed like the ideal way to start the journey. Unfortunately, it took three years to attend and even then, I still had to negotiate attending some sessions alongside a Conference that was being held simultaneously. Fortunately, both events were online and all the resources for PROWSS2023 are also now available online so if I missed a session, I could easily access it later. Prioritizing the sessions which were relevant to my stage in the PhD journey was an excellent decision and at the end of the week there were at least three sessions I was glad that I didn’t miss. The perfect conditions for attending this year’s PROWSS did not come, however two of the sessions I attended and found most helpful were Managing Writing Momentum and Shut up and Work!!

Managing Writing Momentum

Point me to the PhD student who has perfectly mastered the art of maintaining writing momentum! The week was certainly off to a great start with this topic. We were reminded by the Dr Emma Foster that writing momentum is something that can be cultivated and thereafter maintained with practice. To cultivate such momentum, writing must become part of one’s daily routine. Writing every day can help me professionalize something that I already enjoy doing. And if I’m not enjoying it on any given day, … I’ll just have to try pretending that I do. Alternatively, I can imagine that I am a renowned author/academic with an readership who is eager to read my next publication. This session reinforced just how closely related the researcher’s holistic wellbeing is to maintain sustainable patterns for engaging with research and writing well. The image of writing as a muscle that must be strengthened was insightful. But even more sobering was the caution that unhappy writers often lack inspiration, are melancholy, aren’t as creative as they can be and are starved of determination. Prioritizing breaks so that the subconscious can creatively blend ideas is imperative, unless of course you fancy a quick burn out. Not only do regular breaks replenish creativity but it goes a long way to keeping the writer happy to produce quality work. A bit of light yet meaningful humour … “Don’t stop unless your rear end falls off. And if it does fall off, put it in a paper bag and take it with you. Stopping is what kills momentum!” Perseverance is key.

Shut up and work!!

The Online Shut-up and Work Sessions organised by the Graduate School have over the past three years been quite helpful. No surprise then that the day of focused work with other researchers who were determined to accomplish some set tasks was equally valuable. Using the Pomodoro technique with regular intervals helped me to catch up on work that I needed to get done, after a week of online conference and workshops. Being able to identify key areas for follow up the next week gave me a plan for my next workday.

Interestingly the two sessions I reflected on were the start and the end of PROWSS2023. This is not to say that what happened in between was not pertinent to the overall experience. The online resources state otherwise. The start and the end of PROWSS2023 reflect what holds the PhD experience together if we choose to persevere in what could be an edifying adventure.

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