Mastering academic writing. Writing for the Reader: Resolving Structural and Stylistic Frictions

From 15.06.2026 09:00 until 15.06.2026 14:00

Attendance: in person

 

This workshop addresses the common challenges researchers face when translating complex philosophical thought into written form. Often, philosophical writing suffers from being "writer-centric", i.e. focused more on the internal process of discovery than on the reader. Because the discipline deals with high levels of abstraction, failing to account for "reader-awareness" can leave even a solid argument inaccessible.

Over three 90-minute sessions, we will diagnose and tackle these recurring issues. We will move beyond sentence-level corrections to focus on higher-order concerns: fragmented structure, opaque argument development, and frictions caused by differing writing cultures (Continental vs. Anglo-Saxon). Participants will learn to reverse-engineer successful texts to identify the rhetorical strategies that create clarity without sacrificing depth.

The workshop is practical. You will work directly with your own drafts to identify personal writing blind spots. We will also address academic pitfalls such as "zombie nouns" (nominalizations) and the ineffective use of passive voice. You will leave with a concrete toolkit for producing philosophical writing that is both theoretically rigorous and highly readable.

 

The course will be led by Martin Sedláček from the Department of Language Studies at the Czech Language Institute (Czech Academy of Sciences).

The in-person training will take place in the FLÚ meeting room. Capacity is limited to 14 participants.

 

Registration is required to attend the seminar.

 The course is primarily intended for junior researchers at the Institute of Philosophy; however, due to available capacity, we are opening the training to all.

 


 

 

 

 

 

 

Speakers

  • Martin Sedláček, Department of Language Studies at the Czech Language Institute (Czech Academy of Sciences).

    Martin Sedláček, Department of Language Studies at the Czech Language Institute (Czech Academy of Sciences).

    Martin Sedláček prefers to lead courses in a dialogue-based format, whether it’s exam preparation or an academic writing course. Through conversation, I can provide feedback and tailor the course as much as possible to the needs of the students. What I enjoy most about my work is interacting with people from different fields. I look forward to seeing you in one of my courses.

    Education:

    • 2021–present: General Linguistics (PhD student, Faculty of Arts, Charles University)
    • 2017–2020: Japanese Studies (BA, Faculty of Arts, Charles University)
    • 2016–2018: English Language and Didactics (MA, Faculty of Arts, Charles University)
    • 2015–2017: Anglophone Literatures and Cultures (MA, Faculty of Arts, Charles University)
    • 2012–2015: English and American Studies (BA, Faculty of Arts, Charles University)

    Professional Experience:

    • 2021–present: Language Studies Department, Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic (especially academic writing courses in English)
    • 2015–2021: English instructor (mainly corporate training)
    • 2017–2020: Teaching at the Faculty School, Faculty of Arts, Charles University (Jazykoffka)

    Additional Training:

    • 2021: Writing for Publication: Teacher Training, CAP, Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic
    • 2019, 2023: JLPT N2
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