图书馆主页
数据库简介
最新动态
联系我们



返回首页


字顺( Alphabetical List of Journals):

A|B|C|D|E|F|G|H|I|J|K|L|M|N|O|P|Q|R|S|T|U|V|W|X|Y|Z|ALL


检 索:

期刊名称:PUBLICATIONS OF THE ENGLISH GOETHE SOCIETY

ISSN:0959-3683
出版频率:Tri-annual
出版社:ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD, 2-4 PARK SQUARE, MILTON PARK, ABINGDON, ENGLAND, OXON, OX14 4RN
  出版社网址:http://www.maney.co.uk/
期刊网址:http://www.maney.co.uk/index.php/journals/peg/
主题范畴:LITERATURE, GERMAN, DUTCH, SCANDINAVIAN

期刊简介(About the journal)    投稿须知(Instructions to Authors)    编辑部信息(Editorial Board)   



About the journal

The English Goethe Society is the oldest learned society devoted to German Studies in the United Kingdom. It was founded in 1886 in order to promote the study of Goethe's work, and its scope was subsequently expanded to other authors and periods of German literature. Whilst concentrating on the German Classical Age, the Society's interests include German literature and thought of the later nineteenth and twentieth centuries. The Publications of the English Goethe Society (PEGS) publishes the revised lectures and prize winning essays that are first presented to its members. The Society tries to ensure that its programme not only represents the work of established scholars, but also provides an opportunity for younger scholars, including postgraduates, to address a scholarly audience.

 

PEGS increased its frequency to three issues in 2009 with a view to publishing open submission papers that match the aims and scope of the journal. All open papers will be subject to a strict peer review process.


Instructions to Authors

Publications of the English Goethe Society welcomes original papers that match the aims and scope of the Journal on the understanding that the paper has not previously been published, and is not being concurrently submitted for publication elsewhere. All papers will be sent to independent referees. It is a condition of publication that on acceptance of the paper by the Journal Editors that copyright must be assigned to The English Goethe Society.  

 

Submission

All editorial correspondence should be sent byemail to one of the three journal editors Matthew Bell (matthew.bell@kcl.ac.uk), Susanne Kord (susanne.kord@ucl.ac.uk) or W. Daniel Wilson (D.Wilson@rhul.ac.uk). Copy should be submitted by e-mail to the editors, using MS Office Word 97 or subsequent versions and should be double spaced. The article should be submitted for anonymous evaluation, without the author’s name or other identifying information. The first page of all submissions should state the title of the paper, and an abbreviated title (for running headlines within the article). On a separate sheet give the full name and email address to which all correspondence, including proofs, should be sent. An Abstract of the paper of approximately 100 words should be included with all papers. Please provide a place of academic employment or of residence with will appear after the author(s) name at the head of the article.

 

From 2009 the editors of Publications of the English Goethe Society will be accepting open submissions to the journal. For more information please visit www.englishgoethesociety.org/PEGSSubmissions.html.

 

In preparing the electronic version, there is no need to format articles. Use a single (not double) space after the full point at the end of sentences. Please use plain style and avoid elaborate layout or typography, but include italics or bold type when necessary. Papers may be divided into sections, but these may not have titles or be numbered. Please indicate section breaks with three centred asterisks.

Words should not be hyphenated at the end of a line. Consistency in spacing, punctuation, and spelling will be of help. References and captions should be placed at the end of the file. Articles must be accompanied by a short abstract (c. 100-150 words) summarizing the contents of their paper. Articles should also be accompanied by up to 6 key words to aid searchability of the article online. Any acknowledgements should be placed at the end of the article, before any Notes.  

 

Use single inverted commas for short quotations (double for quotations within quotations), but quotations of over fifty words should be single-spaced without inverted commas and separated by a line space from the main text of the paper. Translations are not generally needed for German quotations. Where a passage presents particular difficulty, translation may be offered either in parentheses in the text, or in a footnote. Quotations in languages other than German will require translation. Non-English words in the text, apart from names, should be italicized.

 

For information about style and formatting of articles and file type requirements please click here.

 

Authors, or their funding agency, may sponsor an article for open access publication. For information on article charges and how to exercise this option visit www.maney.co.uk/moreopenchoice. These notes are intended only to provide an overview. Address enquiries to the Journal editor.

 

Supplementary material

Additional material (e.g. datasets, models, animations or videos) that enhances the content and impact of articles. Supplementary material is intended to support arguments advanced in the article; it must not refer to other work nor contain discussion or conclusions that go beyond the content of the article. The inclusion of supplementary material is at the discretion of the Editor whose decision on its relevance and appropriateness is final. Supplementary material should be referred to in the main text, but must be self-contained and supplied as separate files. Refer to each item of supplementary material in parentheses within the text: (Supplementary Material 1), (Supplementary Material 2) and so forth. See the detailed instructions here on submission and presentation of supplementary material.

 

Spelling

For articles in English, British spelling should be followed but with 'ize', not 'ise' where both spellings are permissible. Connection, reflection, etc. are preferred to connexion etc.

 

Notes and References

Footnotes should be used for referencing and should be kept to the strict minimum necessary for documentation. They should contain only minimal extra expository material. Footnote numbers, which should always use arabic numerals, should be given in the text, immediately following the most convenient punctuation mark. . All references should conform to Maney Style available in downloadable form here.

 

Editions of Goethe’s Work

The following editions of Goethes works may be used: Weimarer or Sophien-Ausgabe (WA); Münchner Ausgabe (MA); Frankfurter or Deutscher Klassiker Verlag Ausgabe (FA). Please do not use the Hamburger Ausgabe (HA) as the primary source, though commentaries from it and other editions may of course be cited. Full references to these editions need not be given; instead the abbreviations given in brackets above should be used. Use a single edition as far as possible. The same applies to the National-Ausgabe (NA) of Schillers works. Please use abbreviations for the most common periodicals in German Studies (e.g., DVjs, ECS, GLL, GJb, GYb, GQ, GR, GRM, GSR, JbDSG, LYb, MLN, MLR, PMLA, etc., but do not abbreviate single-word titles such as Euphorion and Monatshefte) as well as selected general collections (DNB, OCD, OED, etc.); if in doubt, use an abbreviation and your editor will decide whether to keep it. Other abbreviations for frequently cited texts may be introduced in a footnote.

 

The use of German

Please note that German nouns and their adjectives embedded in English sentences take the nominative case, regardless of their syntactical position within the surrounding English sentence: e.g. „In this “verwirrte Einöde” into which his loss has plunged him, words are lacking. An exception to this rule should be made when it is necessary to preserve the original case of the German word in order to illustrate a linguistic or textual point.

 

Foreign place names should be given in their English form where this is in current use, e.g. Munich for München, Zurich for Zürich. This applies to place of publication in references as well as to the main text.

 

In references German cities should be given as follows: Frankfurt/Main, Freiburg/Breisgau. In the main text, names should be given in full. Please give only the first place of publication listed on the title page (e.g., „Stuttgart, not „Stuttgart and Weimar).

 

German copy

Text submitted in German follows the same rules as English, subject to the following German variants.

For „ed. byand trans. by, use hrsg. von and „übers. von respectively. For „p. and pp., use S., e.g., H. C. Erik Midelfort, „Melancholische Eiszeit?, in: Kulturelle Konsequenzen der ‘Kleinen Eiszeit’, hrsg. von Wolfgang Behringer, Göttingen, 2005, 239–53 (S. 240–43). Other usual German abbreviations such as „vgl. or Bd. should be used, but not „ebda. or a.a.O. (see no. 10 above).

Place names appear in their German form in references and text proper: e.g. München, Genf.

Quotation marks appear in their English forms („… and “…”), not in German ones (‚...„, „...“ and «...») e.g. Das Gedicht „Das Tagebuch hatte eine lange Inkubationszeit, wie Volkmar Hansen bemerkt. In order to force your word processor to produce English quotation marks, you may have to select English as the default language of the document.

 

Copyright and Ethics

It is the responsibility of the author to ensure that they comply with Maney’s copyright and ethics (including plagiarism) policies. Strong policies in these areas protect the rights of authors, editors, reviewers and publishers alike ensuring the reputation of the publication and copyright holders.

Maney’s policies can be found by reading the information available here, along with best practice guidelines for authors, journal editors and reviewers.

 

Proofs, Illustrations, Permissions and Eprints

More information about all these details can be found here.


Editorial Board

Editors:

Susanne Kord (University College London, UK)

Dan Wilson (Royal Holloway, London )

Matthew Bell (King's College London)

 

International Advisory Board:

Andrew Webber

Angus Nicholls (Queen Mary, University of London)

Alexander Košenina (University of Hannover)

Anil Bhatti (Jawaharlal Nehru University, New Delhi)

Barry Nisbet (University of Cambridge)

Catriona MacLeod (University of Pennsylvania)

Daniel Purdy (Pennsylvania State University)

Duncan Large (Swansea University, UK)

Elizabeth Boa (University of Nottingham)

Florian Krobb (National University of Ireland, Maynooth)

Henk de Berg (University of Sheffield)

Joachim Whaley (University of Cambridge)

Jürgen Barkhoff (Trinity College Dublin)

Karina Lindeiner-Stráský (University of Mainz )

Katharina von Hammerstein (University of Connecticut)

Katrin Kohl (University of Oxford)

Kevin Hilliard (University of Oxford )

Martin Kagel (University of Georgia)

Nicholas Martin (University of Birmingham)

Nicholas Saul (Durham University)

Peter C Feiffer (Georgetown University)

Pól Ó Dochartaigh (University of Ulster)

Ritchie Robertson (The Queen’s College, Oxford)

Simon Richter (University of Pennsylvania)

Sandra Richter (University of Stuttgart )

Sarah Colvin (University of Birmingham )

Todd Kontje (University of California, San Diego)

William Niven (Nottingham Trent University)

Yahya Elsaghe (University of Berne)




邮编:430072   地址:中国武汉珞珈山   电话:027-87682740   管理员Email:
Copyright © 2003 武汉大学图书馆版权所有