The editors ensure a culture of publication integrity through a rigorous peer review process (see below) that prioritizes original research, ethical methodologies, and factual and bibliographic accuracy. They must ensure that decisions are made on the basis of the manuscript’s scholarly merit and the value of its contribution to ongoing critical and methodological conversations in the field. The editors’ chief responsibility is to determine which submissions to the journal will be published. Journal Management & Responsibility of the Editors Past issues are archived through IUScholarWorks. Whole issues of the journal and individual essays are available as downloadable pdf files. No author fees associated with submission or publication are charged. Textual Cultures provides immediate open access to its content on the principle that making research freely available to the public supports a greater global exchange of knowledge. Most of our content consists of scholarly essays and reviews. Textual Cultures is published biannually on an open-access digital platform, IUScholarWorks. All articles will appear also with abstracts in English. Textual Cultures invites work from scholars around the world in English, French, German, Spanish and Italian. Editorial practice and theory are at the center of this enterprise, along with scholarship that examines drafts, notes, manuscripts, first and final cuts, first and later appearances, broadcasts, adaptations, remakes and reprints, letters, illustrated editions, rehearsals and productions, collections, paper and digital archives, and other media forms that transmit, structure, define, and redefine a text. Textual Cultures publishes work that analyzes texts within the complex cultural-historical settings in which they are created, revised, made public, disseminated, and received. Textual Cultures continues the tradition of TEXT, the Society’s first journal (1984–2005), with an ever more inclusive and multi-voiced approach to issues of textual analysis, editorial practice and theory, (re)definitions of textuality, and the diverse textual cultures in which these matters and our approaches evolve. This exchange also includes practitioners in numerous emerging and traditional fields of material studies that explore the production, reproduction and reception of texts in their often multiple cultural contexts. With an expansive definition of text and textuality to include a variety of disciplines and materials, the journal proposes as well an exchange between critics interested in textual interpretation and specialists devoted to the analysis and preparation of those texts as documents or artifacts, e.g., editors, bibliographers, archivists, and digital humanists. Textual Cultures: Texts, Contexts, Interpretation is devoted to textual scholarship in all language traditions. History & Missionįrom its origins in 1981, the Society for Textual Scholarship’s journal has led the way in opening discussions in the field of textual studies. For an overview of the journal’s policies, please see Textual Cultures Publication Mission, Scope, Ethics, and Protocols.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |