What's the purpose of writing one's academic biography in the third person?












37















I see some academics – both professors and grad students – write their biography on their university webpages in the third person, and it sounds really weird.



What's the purpose of writing about oneself, e.g. research accomplishments, research interests, in the third person? Is it considered more professional to do so?



It reads very arrogant and self-indulgent, so I wonder if I'm just missing something.










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    37















    I see some academics – both professors and grad students – write their biography on their university webpages in the third person, and it sounds really weird.



    What's the purpose of writing about oneself, e.g. research accomplishments, research interests, in the third person? Is it considered more professional to do so?



    It reads very arrogant and self-indulgent, so I wonder if I'm just missing something.










    share|improve this question









    New contributor




    user106769 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
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      37








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      I see some academics – both professors and grad students – write their biography on their university webpages in the third person, and it sounds really weird.



      What's the purpose of writing about oneself, e.g. research accomplishments, research interests, in the third person? Is it considered more professional to do so?



      It reads very arrogant and self-indulgent, so I wonder if I'm just missing something.










      share|improve this question









      New contributor




      user106769 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
      Check out our Code of Conduct.












      I see some academics – both professors and grad students – write their biography on their university webpages in the third person, and it sounds really weird.



      What's the purpose of writing about oneself, e.g. research accomplishments, research interests, in the third person? Is it considered more professional to do so?



      It reads very arrogant and self-indulgent, so I wonder if I'm just missing something.







      professors cv writing-style website






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          5 Answers
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          51














          When I wrote a biography of myself, it was because someone in administration asked me to so they could put it into a prospectus, where there would be lots of biographies in a row all in the same editorial voice.



          It was specifically required to be in the third person for that reason: all the profiles are presented as though they have been written by the omniscient author of the document. It wasn't written that way because I wanted it to be, but for an actual purpose.



          Once written, that biography went on file and was put everywhere that needed one. That includes the university website, future grant applications, other advertising material, commendations for students, reports, papers, and sundry other places. Sometimes I copy it there, and sometimes it happens without my even being involved (sometimes without any actual person being involved!).



          In particular, it's useful to put it up front on a public website so that collaborators can easily just copy accurate pre-written text in when they need to provide a profile of me for one of their own purposes.





          There are places that I've written a first-person biography, which is generally a lot shorter. Those are places that are 1) in my voice, and 2) where it was worth the fuss of rewriting something tailored to the situation. In general, and particularly for things published by the university, my "official" biography just goes back in again, because it's there, it's been edited, and it's comprehensive enough.






          share|improve this answer



















          • 46





            Ahem. "When Michael Homer wrote a biography of himself ..."

            – Tasos Papastylianou
            yesterday








          • 1





            @TasosPapastylianou: I was never able to put this feeling into words, why so many (auto) biographies sounded unnatural. Thanks a bunch. +1

            – virolino
            23 hours ago








          • 2





            The other common use for bios, closely related to this, is when you're being introduced for a talk - the introducer often looks online for a summary and it's nice to have something accurate ready for them

            – iayork
            21 hours ago






          • 1





            @emory I think you mean "uninterested" (i.e., bored). "Disinterested" means unbiased, and nobody is disinterested in a biography of themself.

            – David Richerby
            16 hours ago






          • 2





            @DavidRicherby There are occasional difficulties, as possibly indicated in your own comment... I once attended a talk where the introducer said "he has done this, he published that, he comes from wherever blah blah blah..." - and then it turned out that the speaker was female. (She had a slightly unusual given name, not immediately recognisable as female.) Admittedly, very remiss of the introducer not to even have bothered checking.

            – David
            11 hours ago





















          12














          I’d always considered it a means to achieve uniformity throughout the bios when one person is writing them. That is, if you have to write a short biography for each author of a paper, it makes more sense to do it in the third person.



          Also, a lot of academic writing styles discourage the use of the first person (or used to). It’s more likely that the web page third person bios are a copy-paste, or simply written in a style to which the author is accustomed, rather than an attempt at a stealth brag.



          They’re biographies, not autobiographies.






          share|improve this answer



















          • 1





            Hahah. I liked stealthbrag; nice play on "humblebrag"!

            – Tasos Papastylianou
            yesterday











          • That is why biographies should be written by somebody else, and not by the person impersonating somebody (anonymous) else.

            – virolino
            23 hours ago






          • 2





            @virolino, in an ideal world, yes. And every biography would be specifically targeted to the platform where it is presented. But, the easiest way to source info for the bio you have to write and to avoid offending the subject (by inadvertently missing their greatest accomplishment) is to ask them to write it. Never attribute to malice what can easily be explained by (ahem) "efficiency".

            – Pam
            21 hours ago



















          9














          My This author's own opinion is that occasionally this is due to how ingrained 'academicspeak' is in academia. 3rd person / 1st person plural is the norm when writing journal papers.



          In this sense, the reason may well be in fact the opposite to what you state: people avoid writing in the first person, in order not to come across as self-serving and arrogant and claiming personal recognition, but rather appear impartial and recounting events dispationately from a third-person perspective.



          This, along with 'bio reuse' from contexts which specifically required the use of third person narrative, may be a reason why you might see such bios even in contexts where third person narrative would seem less relevant.






          share|improve this answer


























          • Biographies in theater and concert programs are typically also in the third person, yet do not necessarily appear in an academic context or one in which "academicspeak" would be expected. @WGroleau it's not possible to change one's vote on a post more than five minutes after casting the vote unless the post has been edited in the meanwhile.

            – phoog
            19 hours ago



















          5














          In addition to the key "written for use by others" reason put forth by @MichaelHomer, another reason that many academics have a 3rd person biography is that many organize their online present not as "Prof. X" but rather as "Prof. X's group/lab, including Prof. X, students, postdocs, and alumni".



          If the group is the subject, rather than the person, then there is no "I" to narrate, and it's appropriate for all to be listed in 3rd person.






          share|improve this answer































            1














            To somewhat build up on what Jake Beal said, consider the following two texts:





            • Cunningham Group



              I am Iocasta Cunningham and I did my PhD in Astrochelionology on “Great A’Tuin is a black body” …
              I am interested in all sorts of interesting topics from the vast field of theoretical lepidopterology, ranging from the quantum butterfly effect to flapping dynamics.
              My group consists of:




              • Aaron A. Aaronson wrote his master’s thesis on “Analogue search-engine optimisation – a shameless self-study” and is now a PhD student investigating trunk manifolds.






            • Group for Theoretical Lepidopterology



              We investigate all sorts of interesting topics from the vast field of theoretical lepidopterology, ranging from the quantum butterfly effect to flapping dynamics.
              The group consists of:




              • Aaron A. Aaronson wrote his master’s thesis on “Analogue search-engine optimisation – a shameless self-study” and is now a PhD student investigating trunk manifolds.


              • Prof. Iocasta Cunningham is the group’s leader. She did her PhD in Astrochelionology on “Great A’Tuin is a black body” …






            Both texts convey the same information, but (for whatever it is worth) the first one leans more on the arrogant side.
            Now, webpages may have a more complex structure, but the general style is translatable and you can find analogues of both texts out there:




            • Professors who name their group after them and whose webpage puts the primary focus on them – which is not completely unjustified since the professor is not only the boss but usually the only constant.


            • Professors who focus on presenting their group, whose leader they happen to be.
              In this light, it makes complete sense for them to use the third person – for a reason that is quite the opposite of how you are perceiving it.



            Note that I do not want to say that one of the variants is generally better or worse here. (Perceived) arrogance or modesty are only one reason to choose between these styles.






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              5 Answers
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              51














              When I wrote a biography of myself, it was because someone in administration asked me to so they could put it into a prospectus, where there would be lots of biographies in a row all in the same editorial voice.



              It was specifically required to be in the third person for that reason: all the profiles are presented as though they have been written by the omniscient author of the document. It wasn't written that way because I wanted it to be, but for an actual purpose.



              Once written, that biography went on file and was put everywhere that needed one. That includes the university website, future grant applications, other advertising material, commendations for students, reports, papers, and sundry other places. Sometimes I copy it there, and sometimes it happens without my even being involved (sometimes without any actual person being involved!).



              In particular, it's useful to put it up front on a public website so that collaborators can easily just copy accurate pre-written text in when they need to provide a profile of me for one of their own purposes.





              There are places that I've written a first-person biography, which is generally a lot shorter. Those are places that are 1) in my voice, and 2) where it was worth the fuss of rewriting something tailored to the situation. In general, and particularly for things published by the university, my "official" biography just goes back in again, because it's there, it's been edited, and it's comprehensive enough.






              share|improve this answer



















              • 46





                Ahem. "When Michael Homer wrote a biography of himself ..."

                – Tasos Papastylianou
                yesterday








              • 1





                @TasosPapastylianou: I was never able to put this feeling into words, why so many (auto) biographies sounded unnatural. Thanks a bunch. +1

                – virolino
                23 hours ago








              • 2





                The other common use for bios, closely related to this, is when you're being introduced for a talk - the introducer often looks online for a summary and it's nice to have something accurate ready for them

                – iayork
                21 hours ago






              • 1





                @emory I think you mean "uninterested" (i.e., bored). "Disinterested" means unbiased, and nobody is disinterested in a biography of themself.

                – David Richerby
                16 hours ago






              • 2





                @DavidRicherby There are occasional difficulties, as possibly indicated in your own comment... I once attended a talk where the introducer said "he has done this, he published that, he comes from wherever blah blah blah..." - and then it turned out that the speaker was female. (She had a slightly unusual given name, not immediately recognisable as female.) Admittedly, very remiss of the introducer not to even have bothered checking.

                – David
                11 hours ago


















              51














              When I wrote a biography of myself, it was because someone in administration asked me to so they could put it into a prospectus, where there would be lots of biographies in a row all in the same editorial voice.



              It was specifically required to be in the third person for that reason: all the profiles are presented as though they have been written by the omniscient author of the document. It wasn't written that way because I wanted it to be, but for an actual purpose.



              Once written, that biography went on file and was put everywhere that needed one. That includes the university website, future grant applications, other advertising material, commendations for students, reports, papers, and sundry other places. Sometimes I copy it there, and sometimes it happens without my even being involved (sometimes without any actual person being involved!).



              In particular, it's useful to put it up front on a public website so that collaborators can easily just copy accurate pre-written text in when they need to provide a profile of me for one of their own purposes.





              There are places that I've written a first-person biography, which is generally a lot shorter. Those are places that are 1) in my voice, and 2) where it was worth the fuss of rewriting something tailored to the situation. In general, and particularly for things published by the university, my "official" biography just goes back in again, because it's there, it's been edited, and it's comprehensive enough.






              share|improve this answer



















              • 46





                Ahem. "When Michael Homer wrote a biography of himself ..."

                – Tasos Papastylianou
                yesterday








              • 1





                @TasosPapastylianou: I was never able to put this feeling into words, why so many (auto) biographies sounded unnatural. Thanks a bunch. +1

                – virolino
                23 hours ago








              • 2





                The other common use for bios, closely related to this, is when you're being introduced for a talk - the introducer often looks online for a summary and it's nice to have something accurate ready for them

                – iayork
                21 hours ago






              • 1





                @emory I think you mean "uninterested" (i.e., bored). "Disinterested" means unbiased, and nobody is disinterested in a biography of themself.

                – David Richerby
                16 hours ago






              • 2





                @DavidRicherby There are occasional difficulties, as possibly indicated in your own comment... I once attended a talk where the introducer said "he has done this, he published that, he comes from wherever blah blah blah..." - and then it turned out that the speaker was female. (She had a slightly unusual given name, not immediately recognisable as female.) Admittedly, very remiss of the introducer not to even have bothered checking.

                – David
                11 hours ago
















              51












              51








              51







              When I wrote a biography of myself, it was because someone in administration asked me to so they could put it into a prospectus, where there would be lots of biographies in a row all in the same editorial voice.



              It was specifically required to be in the third person for that reason: all the profiles are presented as though they have been written by the omniscient author of the document. It wasn't written that way because I wanted it to be, but for an actual purpose.



              Once written, that biography went on file and was put everywhere that needed one. That includes the university website, future grant applications, other advertising material, commendations for students, reports, papers, and sundry other places. Sometimes I copy it there, and sometimes it happens without my even being involved (sometimes without any actual person being involved!).



              In particular, it's useful to put it up front on a public website so that collaborators can easily just copy accurate pre-written text in when they need to provide a profile of me for one of their own purposes.





              There are places that I've written a first-person biography, which is generally a lot shorter. Those are places that are 1) in my voice, and 2) where it was worth the fuss of rewriting something tailored to the situation. In general, and particularly for things published by the university, my "official" biography just goes back in again, because it's there, it's been edited, and it's comprehensive enough.






              share|improve this answer













              When I wrote a biography of myself, it was because someone in administration asked me to so they could put it into a prospectus, where there would be lots of biographies in a row all in the same editorial voice.



              It was specifically required to be in the third person for that reason: all the profiles are presented as though they have been written by the omniscient author of the document. It wasn't written that way because I wanted it to be, but for an actual purpose.



              Once written, that biography went on file and was put everywhere that needed one. That includes the university website, future grant applications, other advertising material, commendations for students, reports, papers, and sundry other places. Sometimes I copy it there, and sometimes it happens without my even being involved (sometimes without any actual person being involved!).



              In particular, it's useful to put it up front on a public website so that collaborators can easily just copy accurate pre-written text in when they need to provide a profile of me for one of their own purposes.





              There are places that I've written a first-person biography, which is generally a lot shorter. Those are places that are 1) in my voice, and 2) where it was worth the fuss of rewriting something tailored to the situation. In general, and particularly for things published by the university, my "official" biography just goes back in again, because it's there, it's been edited, and it's comprehensive enough.







              share|improve this answer












              share|improve this answer



              share|improve this answer










              answered yesterday









              Michael HomerMichael Homer

              5691911




              5691911








              • 46





                Ahem. "When Michael Homer wrote a biography of himself ..."

                – Tasos Papastylianou
                yesterday








              • 1





                @TasosPapastylianou: I was never able to put this feeling into words, why so many (auto) biographies sounded unnatural. Thanks a bunch. +1

                – virolino
                23 hours ago








              • 2





                The other common use for bios, closely related to this, is when you're being introduced for a talk - the introducer often looks online for a summary and it's nice to have something accurate ready for them

                – iayork
                21 hours ago






              • 1





                @emory I think you mean "uninterested" (i.e., bored). "Disinterested" means unbiased, and nobody is disinterested in a biography of themself.

                – David Richerby
                16 hours ago






              • 2





                @DavidRicherby There are occasional difficulties, as possibly indicated in your own comment... I once attended a talk where the introducer said "he has done this, he published that, he comes from wherever blah blah blah..." - and then it turned out that the speaker was female. (She had a slightly unusual given name, not immediately recognisable as female.) Admittedly, very remiss of the introducer not to even have bothered checking.

                – David
                11 hours ago
















              • 46





                Ahem. "When Michael Homer wrote a biography of himself ..."

                – Tasos Papastylianou
                yesterday








              • 1





                @TasosPapastylianou: I was never able to put this feeling into words, why so many (auto) biographies sounded unnatural. Thanks a bunch. +1

                – virolino
                23 hours ago








              • 2





                The other common use for bios, closely related to this, is when you're being introduced for a talk - the introducer often looks online for a summary and it's nice to have something accurate ready for them

                – iayork
                21 hours ago






              • 1





                @emory I think you mean "uninterested" (i.e., bored). "Disinterested" means unbiased, and nobody is disinterested in a biography of themself.

                – David Richerby
                16 hours ago






              • 2





                @DavidRicherby There are occasional difficulties, as possibly indicated in your own comment... I once attended a talk where the introducer said "he has done this, he published that, he comes from wherever blah blah blah..." - and then it turned out that the speaker was female. (She had a slightly unusual given name, not immediately recognisable as female.) Admittedly, very remiss of the introducer not to even have bothered checking.

                – David
                11 hours ago










              46




              46





              Ahem. "When Michael Homer wrote a biography of himself ..."

              – Tasos Papastylianou
              yesterday







              Ahem. "When Michael Homer wrote a biography of himself ..."

              – Tasos Papastylianou
              yesterday






              1




              1





              @TasosPapastylianou: I was never able to put this feeling into words, why so many (auto) biographies sounded unnatural. Thanks a bunch. +1

              – virolino
              23 hours ago







              @TasosPapastylianou: I was never able to put this feeling into words, why so many (auto) biographies sounded unnatural. Thanks a bunch. +1

              – virolino
              23 hours ago






              2




              2





              The other common use for bios, closely related to this, is when you're being introduced for a talk - the introducer often looks online for a summary and it's nice to have something accurate ready for them

              – iayork
              21 hours ago





              The other common use for bios, closely related to this, is when you're being introduced for a talk - the introducer often looks online for a summary and it's nice to have something accurate ready for them

              – iayork
              21 hours ago




              1




              1





              @emory I think you mean "uninterested" (i.e., bored). "Disinterested" means unbiased, and nobody is disinterested in a biography of themself.

              – David Richerby
              16 hours ago





              @emory I think you mean "uninterested" (i.e., bored). "Disinterested" means unbiased, and nobody is disinterested in a biography of themself.

              – David Richerby
              16 hours ago




              2




              2





              @DavidRicherby There are occasional difficulties, as possibly indicated in your own comment... I once attended a talk where the introducer said "he has done this, he published that, he comes from wherever blah blah blah..." - and then it turned out that the speaker was female. (She had a slightly unusual given name, not immediately recognisable as female.) Admittedly, very remiss of the introducer not to even have bothered checking.

              – David
              11 hours ago







              @DavidRicherby There are occasional difficulties, as possibly indicated in your own comment... I once attended a talk where the introducer said "he has done this, he published that, he comes from wherever blah blah blah..." - and then it turned out that the speaker was female. (She had a slightly unusual given name, not immediately recognisable as female.) Admittedly, very remiss of the introducer not to even have bothered checking.

              – David
              11 hours ago













              12














              I’d always considered it a means to achieve uniformity throughout the bios when one person is writing them. That is, if you have to write a short biography for each author of a paper, it makes more sense to do it in the third person.



              Also, a lot of academic writing styles discourage the use of the first person (or used to). It’s more likely that the web page third person bios are a copy-paste, or simply written in a style to which the author is accustomed, rather than an attempt at a stealth brag.



              They’re biographies, not autobiographies.






              share|improve this answer



















              • 1





                Hahah. I liked stealthbrag; nice play on "humblebrag"!

                – Tasos Papastylianou
                yesterday











              • That is why biographies should be written by somebody else, and not by the person impersonating somebody (anonymous) else.

                – virolino
                23 hours ago






              • 2





                @virolino, in an ideal world, yes. And every biography would be specifically targeted to the platform where it is presented. But, the easiest way to source info for the bio you have to write and to avoid offending the subject (by inadvertently missing their greatest accomplishment) is to ask them to write it. Never attribute to malice what can easily be explained by (ahem) "efficiency".

                – Pam
                21 hours ago
















              12














              I’d always considered it a means to achieve uniformity throughout the bios when one person is writing them. That is, if you have to write a short biography for each author of a paper, it makes more sense to do it in the third person.



              Also, a lot of academic writing styles discourage the use of the first person (or used to). It’s more likely that the web page third person bios are a copy-paste, or simply written in a style to which the author is accustomed, rather than an attempt at a stealth brag.



              They’re biographies, not autobiographies.






              share|improve this answer



















              • 1





                Hahah. I liked stealthbrag; nice play on "humblebrag"!

                – Tasos Papastylianou
                yesterday











              • That is why biographies should be written by somebody else, and not by the person impersonating somebody (anonymous) else.

                – virolino
                23 hours ago






              • 2





                @virolino, in an ideal world, yes. And every biography would be specifically targeted to the platform where it is presented. But, the easiest way to source info for the bio you have to write and to avoid offending the subject (by inadvertently missing their greatest accomplishment) is to ask them to write it. Never attribute to malice what can easily be explained by (ahem) "efficiency".

                – Pam
                21 hours ago














              12












              12








              12







              I’d always considered it a means to achieve uniformity throughout the bios when one person is writing them. That is, if you have to write a short biography for each author of a paper, it makes more sense to do it in the third person.



              Also, a lot of academic writing styles discourage the use of the first person (or used to). It’s more likely that the web page third person bios are a copy-paste, or simply written in a style to which the author is accustomed, rather than an attempt at a stealth brag.



              They’re biographies, not autobiographies.






              share|improve this answer













              I’d always considered it a means to achieve uniformity throughout the bios when one person is writing them. That is, if you have to write a short biography for each author of a paper, it makes more sense to do it in the third person.



              Also, a lot of academic writing styles discourage the use of the first person (or used to). It’s more likely that the web page third person bios are a copy-paste, or simply written in a style to which the author is accustomed, rather than an attempt at a stealth brag.



              They’re biographies, not autobiographies.







              share|improve this answer












              share|improve this answer



              share|improve this answer










              answered yesterday









              PamPam

              3947




              3947








              • 1





                Hahah. I liked stealthbrag; nice play on "humblebrag"!

                – Tasos Papastylianou
                yesterday











              • That is why biographies should be written by somebody else, and not by the person impersonating somebody (anonymous) else.

                – virolino
                23 hours ago






              • 2





                @virolino, in an ideal world, yes. And every biography would be specifically targeted to the platform where it is presented. But, the easiest way to source info for the bio you have to write and to avoid offending the subject (by inadvertently missing their greatest accomplishment) is to ask them to write it. Never attribute to malice what can easily be explained by (ahem) "efficiency".

                – Pam
                21 hours ago














              • 1





                Hahah. I liked stealthbrag; nice play on "humblebrag"!

                – Tasos Papastylianou
                yesterday











              • That is why biographies should be written by somebody else, and not by the person impersonating somebody (anonymous) else.

                – virolino
                23 hours ago






              • 2





                @virolino, in an ideal world, yes. And every biography would be specifically targeted to the platform where it is presented. But, the easiest way to source info for the bio you have to write and to avoid offending the subject (by inadvertently missing their greatest accomplishment) is to ask them to write it. Never attribute to malice what can easily be explained by (ahem) "efficiency".

                – Pam
                21 hours ago








              1




              1





              Hahah. I liked stealthbrag; nice play on "humblebrag"!

              – Tasos Papastylianou
              yesterday





              Hahah. I liked stealthbrag; nice play on "humblebrag"!

              – Tasos Papastylianou
              yesterday













              That is why biographies should be written by somebody else, and not by the person impersonating somebody (anonymous) else.

              – virolino
              23 hours ago





              That is why biographies should be written by somebody else, and not by the person impersonating somebody (anonymous) else.

              – virolino
              23 hours ago




              2




              2





              @virolino, in an ideal world, yes. And every biography would be specifically targeted to the platform where it is presented. But, the easiest way to source info for the bio you have to write and to avoid offending the subject (by inadvertently missing their greatest accomplishment) is to ask them to write it. Never attribute to malice what can easily be explained by (ahem) "efficiency".

              – Pam
              21 hours ago





              @virolino, in an ideal world, yes. And every biography would be specifically targeted to the platform where it is presented. But, the easiest way to source info for the bio you have to write and to avoid offending the subject (by inadvertently missing their greatest accomplishment) is to ask them to write it. Never attribute to malice what can easily be explained by (ahem) "efficiency".

              – Pam
              21 hours ago











              9














              My This author's own opinion is that occasionally this is due to how ingrained 'academicspeak' is in academia. 3rd person / 1st person plural is the norm when writing journal papers.



              In this sense, the reason may well be in fact the opposite to what you state: people avoid writing in the first person, in order not to come across as self-serving and arrogant and claiming personal recognition, but rather appear impartial and recounting events dispationately from a third-person perspective.



              This, along with 'bio reuse' from contexts which specifically required the use of third person narrative, may be a reason why you might see such bios even in contexts where third person narrative would seem less relevant.






              share|improve this answer


























              • Biographies in theater and concert programs are typically also in the third person, yet do not necessarily appear in an academic context or one in which "academicspeak" would be expected. @WGroleau it's not possible to change one's vote on a post more than five minutes after casting the vote unless the post has been edited in the meanwhile.

                – phoog
                19 hours ago
















              9














              My This author's own opinion is that occasionally this is due to how ingrained 'academicspeak' is in academia. 3rd person / 1st person plural is the norm when writing journal papers.



              In this sense, the reason may well be in fact the opposite to what you state: people avoid writing in the first person, in order not to come across as self-serving and arrogant and claiming personal recognition, but rather appear impartial and recounting events dispationately from a third-person perspective.



              This, along with 'bio reuse' from contexts which specifically required the use of third person narrative, may be a reason why you might see such bios even in contexts where third person narrative would seem less relevant.






              share|improve this answer


























              • Biographies in theater and concert programs are typically also in the third person, yet do not necessarily appear in an academic context or one in which "academicspeak" would be expected. @WGroleau it's not possible to change one's vote on a post more than five minutes after casting the vote unless the post has been edited in the meanwhile.

                – phoog
                19 hours ago














              9












              9








              9







              My This author's own opinion is that occasionally this is due to how ingrained 'academicspeak' is in academia. 3rd person / 1st person plural is the norm when writing journal papers.



              In this sense, the reason may well be in fact the opposite to what you state: people avoid writing in the first person, in order not to come across as self-serving and arrogant and claiming personal recognition, but rather appear impartial and recounting events dispationately from a third-person perspective.



              This, along with 'bio reuse' from contexts which specifically required the use of third person narrative, may be a reason why you might see such bios even in contexts where third person narrative would seem less relevant.






              share|improve this answer















              My This author's own opinion is that occasionally this is due to how ingrained 'academicspeak' is in academia. 3rd person / 1st person plural is the norm when writing journal papers.



              In this sense, the reason may well be in fact the opposite to what you state: people avoid writing in the first person, in order not to come across as self-serving and arrogant and claiming personal recognition, but rather appear impartial and recounting events dispationately from a third-person perspective.



              This, along with 'bio reuse' from contexts which specifically required the use of third person narrative, may be a reason why you might see such bios even in contexts where third person narrative would seem less relevant.







              share|improve this answer














              share|improve this answer



              share|improve this answer








              edited 2 hours ago









              Ooker

              5,02053296




              5,02053296










              answered yesterday









              Tasos PapastylianouTasos Papastylianou

              1,23237




              1,23237













              • Biographies in theater and concert programs are typically also in the third person, yet do not necessarily appear in an academic context or one in which "academicspeak" would be expected. @WGroleau it's not possible to change one's vote on a post more than five minutes after casting the vote unless the post has been edited in the meanwhile.

                – phoog
                19 hours ago



















              • Biographies in theater and concert programs are typically also in the third person, yet do not necessarily appear in an academic context or one in which "academicspeak" would be expected. @WGroleau it's not possible to change one's vote on a post more than five minutes after casting the vote unless the post has been edited in the meanwhile.

                – phoog
                19 hours ago

















              Biographies in theater and concert programs are typically also in the third person, yet do not necessarily appear in an academic context or one in which "academicspeak" would be expected. @WGroleau it's not possible to change one's vote on a post more than five minutes after casting the vote unless the post has been edited in the meanwhile.

              – phoog
              19 hours ago





              Biographies in theater and concert programs are typically also in the third person, yet do not necessarily appear in an academic context or one in which "academicspeak" would be expected. @WGroleau it's not possible to change one's vote on a post more than five minutes after casting the vote unless the post has been edited in the meanwhile.

              – phoog
              19 hours ago











              5














              In addition to the key "written for use by others" reason put forth by @MichaelHomer, another reason that many academics have a 3rd person biography is that many organize their online present not as "Prof. X" but rather as "Prof. X's group/lab, including Prof. X, students, postdocs, and alumni".



              If the group is the subject, rather than the person, then there is no "I" to narrate, and it's appropriate for all to be listed in 3rd person.






              share|improve this answer




























                5














                In addition to the key "written for use by others" reason put forth by @MichaelHomer, another reason that many academics have a 3rd person biography is that many organize their online present not as "Prof. X" but rather as "Prof. X's group/lab, including Prof. X, students, postdocs, and alumni".



                If the group is the subject, rather than the person, then there is no "I" to narrate, and it's appropriate for all to be listed in 3rd person.






                share|improve this answer


























                  5












                  5








                  5







                  In addition to the key "written for use by others" reason put forth by @MichaelHomer, another reason that many academics have a 3rd person biography is that many organize their online present not as "Prof. X" but rather as "Prof. X's group/lab, including Prof. X, students, postdocs, and alumni".



                  If the group is the subject, rather than the person, then there is no "I" to narrate, and it's appropriate for all to be listed in 3rd person.






                  share|improve this answer













                  In addition to the key "written for use by others" reason put forth by @MichaelHomer, another reason that many academics have a 3rd person biography is that many organize their online present not as "Prof. X" but rather as "Prof. X's group/lab, including Prof. X, students, postdocs, and alumni".



                  If the group is the subject, rather than the person, then there is no "I" to narrate, and it's appropriate for all to be listed in 3rd person.







                  share|improve this answer












                  share|improve this answer



                  share|improve this answer










                  answered 15 hours ago









                  jakebealjakebeal

                  149k31536778




                  149k31536778























                      1














                      To somewhat build up on what Jake Beal said, consider the following two texts:





                      • Cunningham Group



                        I am Iocasta Cunningham and I did my PhD in Astrochelionology on “Great A’Tuin is a black body” …
                        I am interested in all sorts of interesting topics from the vast field of theoretical lepidopterology, ranging from the quantum butterfly effect to flapping dynamics.
                        My group consists of:




                        • Aaron A. Aaronson wrote his master’s thesis on “Analogue search-engine optimisation – a shameless self-study” and is now a PhD student investigating trunk manifolds.






                      • Group for Theoretical Lepidopterology



                        We investigate all sorts of interesting topics from the vast field of theoretical lepidopterology, ranging from the quantum butterfly effect to flapping dynamics.
                        The group consists of:




                        • Aaron A. Aaronson wrote his master’s thesis on “Analogue search-engine optimisation – a shameless self-study” and is now a PhD student investigating trunk manifolds.


                        • Prof. Iocasta Cunningham is the group’s leader. She did her PhD in Astrochelionology on “Great A’Tuin is a black body” …






                      Both texts convey the same information, but (for whatever it is worth) the first one leans more on the arrogant side.
                      Now, webpages may have a more complex structure, but the general style is translatable and you can find analogues of both texts out there:




                      • Professors who name their group after them and whose webpage puts the primary focus on them – which is not completely unjustified since the professor is not only the boss but usually the only constant.


                      • Professors who focus on presenting their group, whose leader they happen to be.
                        In this light, it makes complete sense for them to use the third person – for a reason that is quite the opposite of how you are perceiving it.



                      Note that I do not want to say that one of the variants is generally better or worse here. (Perceived) arrogance or modesty are only one reason to choose between these styles.






                      share|improve this answer




























                        1














                        To somewhat build up on what Jake Beal said, consider the following two texts:





                        • Cunningham Group



                          I am Iocasta Cunningham and I did my PhD in Astrochelionology on “Great A’Tuin is a black body” …
                          I am interested in all sorts of interesting topics from the vast field of theoretical lepidopterology, ranging from the quantum butterfly effect to flapping dynamics.
                          My group consists of:




                          • Aaron A. Aaronson wrote his master’s thesis on “Analogue search-engine optimisation – a shameless self-study” and is now a PhD student investigating trunk manifolds.






                        • Group for Theoretical Lepidopterology



                          We investigate all sorts of interesting topics from the vast field of theoretical lepidopterology, ranging from the quantum butterfly effect to flapping dynamics.
                          The group consists of:




                          • Aaron A. Aaronson wrote his master’s thesis on “Analogue search-engine optimisation – a shameless self-study” and is now a PhD student investigating trunk manifolds.


                          • Prof. Iocasta Cunningham is the group’s leader. She did her PhD in Astrochelionology on “Great A’Tuin is a black body” …






                        Both texts convey the same information, but (for whatever it is worth) the first one leans more on the arrogant side.
                        Now, webpages may have a more complex structure, but the general style is translatable and you can find analogues of both texts out there:




                        • Professors who name their group after them and whose webpage puts the primary focus on them – which is not completely unjustified since the professor is not only the boss but usually the only constant.


                        • Professors who focus on presenting their group, whose leader they happen to be.
                          In this light, it makes complete sense for them to use the third person – for a reason that is quite the opposite of how you are perceiving it.



                        Note that I do not want to say that one of the variants is generally better or worse here. (Perceived) arrogance or modesty are only one reason to choose between these styles.






                        share|improve this answer


























                          1












                          1








                          1







                          To somewhat build up on what Jake Beal said, consider the following two texts:





                          • Cunningham Group



                            I am Iocasta Cunningham and I did my PhD in Astrochelionology on “Great A’Tuin is a black body” …
                            I am interested in all sorts of interesting topics from the vast field of theoretical lepidopterology, ranging from the quantum butterfly effect to flapping dynamics.
                            My group consists of:




                            • Aaron A. Aaronson wrote his master’s thesis on “Analogue search-engine optimisation – a shameless self-study” and is now a PhD student investigating trunk manifolds.






                          • Group for Theoretical Lepidopterology



                            We investigate all sorts of interesting topics from the vast field of theoretical lepidopterology, ranging from the quantum butterfly effect to flapping dynamics.
                            The group consists of:




                            • Aaron A. Aaronson wrote his master’s thesis on “Analogue search-engine optimisation – a shameless self-study” and is now a PhD student investigating trunk manifolds.


                            • Prof. Iocasta Cunningham is the group’s leader. She did her PhD in Astrochelionology on “Great A’Tuin is a black body” …






                          Both texts convey the same information, but (for whatever it is worth) the first one leans more on the arrogant side.
                          Now, webpages may have a more complex structure, but the general style is translatable and you can find analogues of both texts out there:




                          • Professors who name their group after them and whose webpage puts the primary focus on them – which is not completely unjustified since the professor is not only the boss but usually the only constant.


                          • Professors who focus on presenting their group, whose leader they happen to be.
                            In this light, it makes complete sense for them to use the third person – for a reason that is quite the opposite of how you are perceiving it.



                          Note that I do not want to say that one of the variants is generally better or worse here. (Perceived) arrogance or modesty are only one reason to choose between these styles.






                          share|improve this answer













                          To somewhat build up on what Jake Beal said, consider the following two texts:





                          • Cunningham Group



                            I am Iocasta Cunningham and I did my PhD in Astrochelionology on “Great A’Tuin is a black body” …
                            I am interested in all sorts of interesting topics from the vast field of theoretical lepidopterology, ranging from the quantum butterfly effect to flapping dynamics.
                            My group consists of:




                            • Aaron A. Aaronson wrote his master’s thesis on “Analogue search-engine optimisation – a shameless self-study” and is now a PhD student investigating trunk manifolds.






                          • Group for Theoretical Lepidopterology



                            We investigate all sorts of interesting topics from the vast field of theoretical lepidopterology, ranging from the quantum butterfly effect to flapping dynamics.
                            The group consists of:




                            • Aaron A. Aaronson wrote his master’s thesis on “Analogue search-engine optimisation – a shameless self-study” and is now a PhD student investigating trunk manifolds.


                            • Prof. Iocasta Cunningham is the group’s leader. She did her PhD in Astrochelionology on “Great A’Tuin is a black body” …






                          Both texts convey the same information, but (for whatever it is worth) the first one leans more on the arrogant side.
                          Now, webpages may have a more complex structure, but the general style is translatable and you can find analogues of both texts out there:




                          • Professors who name their group after them and whose webpage puts the primary focus on them – which is not completely unjustified since the professor is not only the boss but usually the only constant.


                          • Professors who focus on presenting their group, whose leader they happen to be.
                            In this light, it makes complete sense for them to use the third person – for a reason that is quite the opposite of how you are perceiving it.



                          Note that I do not want to say that one of the variants is generally better or worse here. (Perceived) arrogance or modesty are only one reason to choose between these styles.







                          share|improve this answer












                          share|improve this answer



                          share|improve this answer










                          answered 4 hours ago









                          WrzlprmftWrzlprmft

                          34.6k11109186




                          34.6k11109186






















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