Can I call myself a professor?

Other people have started calling me a professor. When I worked in South Africa last October, Professor Lynn Hendricks, who brought me over, referred to me as Prof Helen Kara. When I queried this, she told me firmly that as far as she’s concerned, I am a professor.

Then this year Professor Jackie Carter made a similar comment on LinkedIn.

So can I call myself a professor now?

On the one hand, I can call myself whatever I like. I could style myself Sovereign of Scholarship or Empress of Enquiry if I wanted to. My friend and colleague Janet Salmons calls herself a free-range scholar, and I wish I’d thought of that first! So in this sense, yes, I could call myself a professor.

On the other hand, the title of professor is given to people by other people in recognition of their professional accomplishments. The recipients are usually experts in their field. I was very uncomfortable with the idea when people began to call me an expert, but that was over 10 years ago and I’ve got used to it now. (Though I’m still questioning it as a concept, particularly the way it intersects with power.) Also, professors have usually made a significant contribution to their field. Well, OK, I’ve done that too. But, and this is the crucial part, professors are all academics, and I am not, and never have been, an academic.

Professorships are given to people by other people, but always in an institutional context. There are honorary professorships, but I’ve never been offered one of those (except for the time an invitation came from a person who hadn’t checked whether their institution agreed with the offer, which they didn’t, so it never actually happened).

I’m happy calling myself an independent researcher and scholar because that’s what I am. So I won’t be calling myself a professor. If an institution ever wants to award me an honorary professorship, I may rethink this, but given the current state of academia I don’t see that happening.

What might happen, though, as I’m in my 60s now, is that in a few years’ time I could award myself the title of ‘independent researcher emerita’. We’ll see!

6 thoughts on “Can I call myself a professor?

  1. I know that names are not the same as titles, but (for your reading pleasure) here are the names that you can’t call your kid in Australia (or change your name to via deed poll).

    Naming restrictions, Births Deaths and Marriages, Australia.

    The fun bit is the part under ‘A name that is contrary to the public interest’.

    • Mr and Mrs Gadget can’t name their kid ‘Inspector’ and neither can anyone else.
    • Can’t change your name to ‘God’ or ‘Goddess’ (except, I guess, by popular usage).
    • Can’t give yourself a royal title as a first name, Queen Kara.
    • Can’t call myself “Prime Minister O’Donnell”, no matter how much I want to.

    Them’s the breaks.

    God-Emperor J0n4th4n Snr the IVth, Long-May-He-Reign O’Donnell-O’Donnell-O’Donnell-O’Donnell.

    Liked by 1 person

Leave a comment

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.