期刊名称:JOURNAL OF POLITENESS RESEARCH-LANGUAGE BEHAVIOUR CULTURE
期刊简介(About the journal)
投稿须知(Instructions to Authors)
编辑部信息(Editorial Board)
About the journal
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Aims & Scope
The Journal of Politeness Research responds to the urgent need to provide an international forum for the discussion of all aspects of politeness as a complex linguistic and non-linguistic phenomenon. Politeness has interested researchers in fields of academic activity as diverse as business studies, foreign language teaching, developmental psychology, social psychology, sociolinguistics, linguistic pragmatics, social anthropology, cultural studies, sociology, communication studies, and gender studies. The journal provides an outlet through which researchers on politeness phenomena from these diverse fields of interest may publish their findings and where it will be possible to keep up to date with the wide range of research published in this expanding field. The wealth of published material on the subject of polite language usage should not blind us to the need to extend the study of politeness beyond its linguistic aspects. Hence the multidisciplinary scope of this new journal, which aims to attract original contributions from researchers in a wide range of academic and professional fields. This ambitious and exciting new venture is also a long-awaited opportunity to create synergies between researchers from different disciplines and to encourage dissemination of findings from lesser studied languages and cultures in an effort to deepen our understanding of the nature of politeness within and beyond Western geographical and ideological boundaries.
The journal is published twice a year and publishes research articles, review articles on books published within the scope of politeness research and book reviews relevant to politeness research but of a more general nature. There will also be conference announcements and information on upcoming aJournal of Politeness Research is a peer-reviewed journal of international scope.
The journal is associated with the work of the international Politeness Research Group whose founding British universities include Leeds, Loughborough, Nottingham, Nottingham Trent, Sheffield Hallam and York St. John.
cademic events.
Abstracting/Indexing
Journal of Politeness Research is covered by the following abstracting/indexing services:
Academic OneFile (Gale/Cengage Learning)
Bibliography of Linguistic Literature Bibliographie Linguistischer Literatur (BLL)
EBSCO Current Abstracts
IBR International Bibliography of Book Reviews of Scholarly Literature in the Humanities and Social Sciences
IBZ International Bibliography of Periodical Literature in the Humanities and Social Sciences
OCLC Electronic Collections Online
Sociological Abstracts
Instructions to Authors
1. Submitting an article for publication
Manuscripts of articles (approx. 50,000¨C60,000 characters, including punctuation, spaces, etc.) should be in English. Authors whose native language is not English are asked to have their article carefully checked by a native speaker.
Manuscripts should be submitted electronically. Please e-mail submissions as at-tached files to the Editors-in-Chief:
E-mail: Politeness.Research@degruyter.com
The article must be accompanied by 1) cover sheet listing after ¡®Submission for Journal of Politeness¡¯: name(s) of the author(s); full institutional address and e-mail address of the main author; short title of the article (for running head); size of the paper in total characters (including punctuation, spaces, etc.); 2) abstract of no more than 200 words, summarizing the whole paper, not just the conclusions; 3) a list of
up to six keywords; 4) bionote (brief academic biography of the author in 50¨C75 words) on a separate sheet.
2. Peer review
The journal operates a double-blind peer review that usually takes four months.
Submissions are sent to 2 reviewers.
3. Formatting and style
Once accepted for publication, the author(s) will be required to submit the final ver-sion electronically conforming to journal style.
Please see our style sheet for details regarding journal style at:
http://www.degruyter.de/files/down/mouton_journal_stylesheet.pdf
If possible, a common wordprocessing program such as WORD should be used. Any special characters used should be labeled and clearly identified at their first occurrence. The Editors-in-Chief reserve the right to reject any articles that do not conform to the requirements.
4. Permissions
Copies of any letters granting permission to reproduce illustrations or tables from other sources, or lengthy quoted passages, must be included with the manuscript.
5. Proofs
Authors are asked to check their manuscripts very carefully before submitting them in order to prevent delays and extra costs at proofing. Authors will receive PDF proofs for correction which must be returned by dates given in the publication schedule.
6. Offprints
Upon publication, authors will receive electronic offprints (in PDF format) of their contribution. Guest editors of special issues will receive complimentary print copies of the issue.
Editorial Board
Please address your queries and submissions (ideally electronically) to the Editors-in-Chief:
E-mail: Politeness.Research@degruyter.com
Derek Bousfield English Language and Linguistics School of Journalism, Media and Communication Fylde Building University of Central Lancashire Preston Lancashire, PR1 2HE United Kingdom
Karen Grainger Department of Media Arts and Communication Faculty of ACES Sheffield Hallam University Sheffield, S1 NU United Kingdom
Editorial Team
Editorial Board: Christine Christie (Loughborough University); Derek Bousfield (University of Central Lancashire); Karen Grainger (Sheffield Hallam University); Francesca Bargiela (Independent Researcher); Sandra Harris (Nottingham Trent University); Sara Mills (Sheffield Hallam University); Richard Watts (University of Berne)
Review editor: Bethan Davies (University of Leeds)
Editorial assistant: Wendy Patterson (Loughborough University) W.Patterson@lboro.ac.uk
Advisory Board
Robert Arundale (University of Alaska Fairbanks) Arin Bayraktaroglu (The Cambridge Centre for Languages) Shoshana Blum Kulka (Hebrew University of Jerusalem) Penelope Brown (Max Planck Institute for Psycholinguistics) Jonathan Culpeper (Lancaster University) Janet Holmes (Victoria University of Wellington) Thomas Holtgraves (Ball State University) Juliane House (University of Hamburg) Richard Janney (Ludwig-Maximilians-University of Munich) Gabriele Kasper (University of Hawai¡¯i) Abdennour Kharraki (University Mohammed 1) Miriam Locher (University of Basel) Rosina Marquez-Reiter (University of Surrey) Yoshiko Matsumoto (Stanford University) David Morand (Pennsylvania State University) Yuling Pan (United States Census Bureau) Barbara Pizziconi (SOAS, University of London) Maria Sifianou (University of Athens) Helen Spencer Oatey (UK eUniversities Worldwide)
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