期刊名称:WAR IN HISTORY
期刊简介(About the journal)
投稿须知(Instructions to Authors)
编辑部信息(Editorial Board)
About the journal
Aims and Scope:
War in History journal takes the view that military history should be integrated into a broader definition of history, and benefits from the insights provided by other approaches to history.
Recognising that the study of war is more than simply the study of conflict, War in History embraces war in all its aspects:
> Economic
> Social
> Political
> Military
Articles include the study of naval forces, maritime power and air forces, as well as more narrowly defined military matters. There is no restriction as to period: the journal is as receptive to the study of classical or feudal warfare as to Napoleonic.
This journal provides you with a continuous update on war in history over many historical periods.
Instructions to Authors Manuscript Submission Guidelines:
War in History interprets its subject as broadly as possible: it is as receptive to the study of classical of feudal warfare as to Napoleonic; it embraces the study of conflict at sea and in the air as well as on land; it views war in its economic, social and political as much as purely military aspects.
War in History is a refereed journal. In order to be acceptable for publication submissions must make a new interpretative or factual contribution. Contemporary strategic studies does not fall within the journal's remit; it will eschew the speculative and purely analytical; but it will embrace proper historical study of the very recent (as well as more distant) past.
Notes to contributors on preparation of typescripts
You may send your submission to either of the editors. Please take care to send your top copy and two photocopies. All manuscripts will be refereed 'blind' and should not be under consideration for publication elsewhere. Articles should be between 5000 and 10 000 words in length, although in exceptional circumstances longer pieces will be considered.
Professor Hew Strachan
All Souls College
Oxford
OX1 4AL
UK
Email: hew.strachan@all-souls.ox.ac.uk
Professor Dennis E Showalter
Department of History
The Colorado College
14 East Cache La Poudre Street
CO, Colorado Springs 80903
USA
Email: DShowalter@ColoradoCollege.edu
Book reviews need to be submitted to wihbookreviews@onetel.com.
1. The Typescript
The typescript should be prepared on good quality A4 or quarto paper, double-spaced and with generous margins at head, foot and left- and right-hand margins. The right-hand margin should not be justified. Please supply an abstract of up to 100 words.
2. The disk
To speed up the publication process we request authors to submit articles on disk as well as on paper.
Microsoft Word is the preferred word processor. No artwork should be included in the text files. Any artwork provided on disk should be in either TIFF, or EPS format. Each piece of artwork should be saved as a separate file. When preparing your paper:
> Use the minimum formatting
> Roman, bold and italic type can be used, but use only one typeface and size
> Capitals should be used only where they are to appear in the finished text
> The text should be ranged left and unjustified, with hyphenation cancelled
> Indents, underlining and tabs should be avoided unless absolutely necessary
> Headings and paragraphs should be separated by two carriage returns
> There should be only one space between words and only one space after any punctuation
3. The title page
Give the title of the paper and a running title if the main title is very long. Authors should include their names and initials, their posts at the time they did the work and their current appointments and qualifications. The name and address of the author to whom correspondence, proofs and offprint order are to be sent should be given, together with telephone and fax numbers if possible.
4. Style
Please follow (or ask your typist to follow) these notes:
(i) Use 'z' not 's' where there is an alternative, and in general follow the first
variant given by the Shorter Oxford English Dictionary (eg, realize, idealize, analyse, advertise).
(ii) Dates: '16 January 1990' not 'January 16, 1990'.
(iii) Numbers: adopt a rule that all numbers under 10 should be spelt out in letters
except where attached to a unit of quantity (eg, 1 mm. or 3 kg.) or percentages (e.g. 3 per cent), and that all numbers of 10 or more should be rendered in digits except where the context makes this awkward (e.g., use spelt-out forms at the beginning of a sentence). Write numbers as 1-3, 113-14, 1003-14, 1033-4. Write 0.5, 0.67 not .5, .67 etc.
(iv) Capitalization: avoid excessive capitalization.
Titles: King John. The King says but a king must. The Minister for Information, but the minister of a church. The Foreign Secretary, the Duke of Buccleuch, but a duke, a bishop. Hyphenated titles are capitalized in both parts: Major-General, Vice-President, etc.
Geographical: North, South, East, West if part of the title of an area or a political division, e.g. South Africa, Western Europe, Western capitalism, but not if they are descriptions in general terms, e.g. the south of Scotland, south-west California, western winds.
Brand names: Vaseline, Thermos, Spitfire.
Institutions: The state, the church but the State of Indiana, the Roman Catholic Church. Parliament but parliamentary behaviour, parliamentarians. Communism and Fascism take capitals but capitalism, syndicalism, social democracy, socialism, the press (of newspapers).
Political/military: The Republican Party, but the party; the Tory government and the
government, government policy. The Great War was the war to end all wars. The British Army, the officer corps, army ways, the army fought till death. A coalition was formed, the Lloyd George Coalition Government. The left of the party, left-wing politics. The Roman Empire, the politics of empire, Roman imperialism. The Ministry of Defence, the Ministries of Defence and Agriculture.
(v) Italics: use italics for emphasis sparingly.
(vi) Abbreviations: initial letter abbreviations should be typed with no full point
(eg, UK, UNESCO, BBC). Abbreviations in which the last letter of the abbreviation is the same as the last letter of the word should also have no full point (eg, Mr , St, BUT no., Str., etc.). (Abbreviate number as 'no.' rather than signify as '#'.)
5. Headings
In dividing articles under headings, please weight your headings by writing A, B, C etc. in the margin of the page:
A: subheading styled I, II, III etc.
B: subsubheading styled 1, 2, 3 etc.
C: subsubsubheading styled a, b, c etc.
Please avoid using more than three weights of subheading.
6. Illustrations
All maps, diagrams, figures and graphs should be submitted in the form of completed artwork suitable for reproduction. They should be separate from the typescript (with a list of captions on a separate sheet), but their place in the text should be marked.
Line diagrams: No illustration (including caption) will be given more space than the text area of the journal page, i.e. 192 mm. x 114 mm. Figures should ideally be drawn for a reduction of one-third ie, 3:2 or 150:100 mm. Where possible, all figures should be drawn for the same reduction.
All lines in a drawing should be of even weight. If tints are required the Letraset range is the most suitable. Do not use too fine a tint as this may result in a blotchy appearance after reduction. Lettering should be of graphic design standard, should be of even weight and should follow the usual typographical style.
All costs for colour reproduction of figures must be met by the author.
7. Tables
Tables should be typed on separate sheets. Indicate in the margin of the text where the tables should be placed.
8. References
References should follow the 'Humane' System. They should be numbered in the order in which they appear in the text, and even though they will be set as footnotes should be supplied separate from the main text, in the following form:
(a) Book: Author, title (place of publication, publisher, date), volume number (in roman capital numerals), page reference.
e.g. Increase Mather, Life and Death of Richard Mather (Cambridge, Mass., 1969), pp.10-11.
subsequently: Mather, Richard Mather, p.12.
(b) Edited text
e.g. Edward, Earl of Clarendon, History of the Rebellion ed. W.D.Macray (6 vols., Oxford, 1888) V, p.288.
subsequently: Clarendon, History V, p.384.
(c) Edited documents
e.g. S.R.Gardiner, ed., Constitutional Documents of the Puritan Revolution (Oxford, OUP, 1906), p.102.
subsequently: Gardiner, Constitutional Documents, p.114.
(d) Manuscript documents
e.g. Calendar of State Papers Domestic (CSPD) 1640, p.634.
subsequently: CSPD 1640, p.555.
(e) Journal articles: Author, title, journal, volume number (date), page references.
e.g. P.Roebuck, 'The Constables of Evingham', Recusant History IX (1956), pp.75-7.
subsequently: Roebuck, 'Evingham', p.75.
(f) Collections of essays or articles: Author, title of essay, in editor, book title (place of publication, publisher, date), page reference.
e.g. K.Lindley, 'The Part Played by the Catholics', in Brian Manning, ed., Politics, Religion and the English Civil War (London, 1973), p.145.
subsequently: Lindley, 'Catholics', p.150.
The above system obviates the need for 'op.cit.', except in consecutive footnotes, e.g.
footnote 1: CSPD 1640, p.555.
footnote 2: Op. cit., p.123.
Please avoid other Latin or latinate terms, such as 'ibid.', 'loc. cit.' etc.
Book titles should have the initial letter of the principal words capitalized, eg Politics, Religion and the English Civil War, not Politics, religion and the English civil war.
9. Copyright
Authors must obtain permission to reproduce all matter in the following categories:
(i) All maps, diagrams, figures and photographs (forms are available from the publishers).
(ii) Single passages of prose exceeding 250 words, or scattered passages totalling more than 400 words from any one work.
Please supply the publisher with full information for all work cited, including author, date published, publisher, and page references.
At present EU copyright extends to 70 years after the death of the author or 70 years after publication of a scholarly edition.
10. Proofs
Proofs will be supplied only once in the form of page proofs. Please remember that:
(i) Proof corrections are disproportionately expensive. For example, the insertion of three commas on a page will frequently cost as much, or more than, the original setting cost of the entire page.
(ii) If you return proofs even a few days after the date stipulated, it may be too late to include your corrections in the final version of the journal.
Editorial Board Editorial Board:
Book Review Editor ( Pre 1815) |
D A Parrott |
University of Oxford, UK |
|
Book Review Editor ( Post 1815) |
Phillips O'Brien |
University of Glasgow, UK |
|
Editorial Board |
Simon Ball |
University of Glasgow, UK |
A I Forrest |
University of York, UK |
David French |
University College London, UK |
Paul Kennedy |
Yale University, New Haven, USA |
Eugenia Kiesling |
U S Military Academy, USA |
Peter Maslowski |
University of Nebraska-Lincoln, USA |
Arthur Waldron |
University of Pennsylvania, USA |
|
Advisory Board |
Bernard Bachrach |
University of Minnesota, USA |
J Belich |
University of Auckland, New Zealand |
J.P Bertaud |
Univ of Paris I, Pantheon-Sorbonne, France |
Brian J Bond |
King's College London, UK |
Philippe Contamine |
University of Paris IV- Paris-Sorbonne, France |
Anne E Curry |
University of Southampton, UK |
Jurgen Forster |
Freiburg i.Br., Germany |
Stig Forster |
University of Bern, Switzerland |
William Fuller |
Naval War College, USA |
Azar Gat |
Tel Aviv University, Israel |
J B Gillingham |
London School of Economics, UK |
John Gooch |
University of Leeds, UK |
J G Grey |
University of New South Wales, Australia |
John Hattendorf |
Naval War College, USA |
Lothar Hobelt |
University of Vienna, Austria |
Sir Howard |
Newbury, UK |
Tomoyuki Ishizu |
National Institute for Defense Studies, Tokyo, Japan |
Nicola Labanca |
University of Siena, Italy |
Andrew Lambert |
King's College London, UK |
John Lynn |
University of Illinois, USA |
Evan Mawdsley |
University of Glasgow, UK |
Richard J Overy |
King's College London, UK |
Cliff Rogers |
U S Military Academy, USA |
Martin Van Creveld |
Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Israel |
|