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期刊名称:JOURNAL OF ASIAN HISTORY

ISSN:0021-910X
出版频率:Semi-annual
出版社:VERLAG OTTO HARRASSOWITZ, TAUMUSSTR 14,, WIESBADEN, GERMANY, 65183
  出版社网址:http://www.harrassowitz.de/
期刊网址:http://www.ioc.u-tokyo.ac.jp/pub/newjournal.htm
主题范畴:HISTORY;    ASIAN STUDIES

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
The International Journal of Asian Studies (IJAS) sponsored by the Institute of Oriental Culture (IOC), University of Tokyo and published by Cambridge University Press, is an international and interdisciplinary English-language periodical publishing research on Asia, primarily in the social sciences and humanities. The first issue was published in January 2004. While the Journal, in order to encourage multi-directional scholarly communication among scholars around the world working in Asian studies, aims to focus attention on the work of Asian scholars, it welcomes contributions from scholars of Asian Studies from around the world. It will consist of both themed and general issues, and will be published twice a year.
SCOPE
The Journal examines Asia on a regional basis, emphasising patterns and tendencies that go beyond the borders of individual countries. For example, intra-Asian networks have played a major role in the shaping of modern Asia, but their internal operations and position within worldwide networks remain poorly understood. The Journal covers all regions of Asia, but it has a particular interest in eastern Asia (i.e., Korea, China, Taiwan, Vietnam) since, with the exception of Japan, the gap between Asian and non-Asian scholarship is wider for this region than elsewhere.
Modern and contemporary Asia has witnessed dynamic transformations in cultures, societies, economics and politics, and so confronts issues of collective identity formation, ecological crisis, rapid economic change and resurgence of religion. The clarification of past experiences can help produce a deeper understanding of contemporary change. Therefore the Journal is particularly interested in locating contemporary changes within a historical framework, especially using interdisciplinary approaches, and so promotes comparative studies involving the various regions of Asia. By doing so it hopes to foster a move away from the explicit or implicit yardstick of European experience.



Instructions to Authors

SUBMISSION OF ARTICLES

The IJAS welcomes the submission of both original papers and survey articles from scholars, including postgraduate students. Since it is attempting to cross methodological and regional boundaries in the approach to Asian Studies, we would particularly appreciate papers that can develop new methodologies and subject areas within their general approach. Individual papers on particular areas and themes (not necessarily comparative) are of course welcome. Themed issues are proposed and scholars are invited to submit suitable papers.

1. Submissions
Articles submitted for publication should be sent to the Managing Editor, International Journal of Asian Studies, Institute of Oriental Culture, University of Tokyo. Copies of manuscripts cannot be returned.

Submitted manuscripts will be unpublished, and not being considered for publication elsewhere. Upon acceptance of a paper, the authors will be asked to assign copyright (on certain conditions) to Cambridge University Press. Contributors are responsible for obtaining permission to reproduce any materials, including photographs and illustrations for which they do not hold copyright.


2. Manuscript preparation
The recommended length for articles is not more than 12,000 words, including footnotes and references. Review articles should not exceed 8,000 words. Two copies of the manuscript should be submitted on white paper, printed on one side only and double spaced throughout, including notes and references, together with an Abstract of not more than 150 words and a brief profile (about 150 words) about the author, printed on separate sheets. Tables and figures (including graphs) should be printed on separate sheets at the end of the manuscript. The author's name, address, email address and title of manuscript should appear on a coversheet. When an article has been accepted for publication, the author should send a final version on computer disc (IBM compatible PC or Apple Macintosh).

All submissions should be made in English, although exceptions may be made in certain circumstances. Any non-English manuscript must be translated into English before final acceptance.

3. Text conventions
Articles may be submitted using either English or American spelling and conventional punctuation. Consistency must be maintained.

Words or phrases in other languages except for proper names, or quotations or words in common usage should be in italics. In the case of Chinese and Japanese, and any other region where characters are used, they should be included in the text, at first mention only. A name or term which first appears in a footnote should also be provided with characters the first time it appears in the main text. Romanization of Chinese should follow the Pinyin system and Japanese the Hepburn system. Korean names and terms should use the McCune-Reischauer system. In the case of Pinyin, it is used without tone or diacritical marks. Where the convention is to use the Wade-Giles system for certain names, this should be followed (e.g. Chiang Kai-Shek).

Diacritics should be provided for any language whose romanization requires them.

For quotations, double quotation marks should be used, with single quotation marks used for quotations within quotations. Quotations of more than 50 words should be broken off from the text and indented without quotation marks.

Dates should be simplified to a day- month-year format not using punctuation: 15 May 1965.

Spans of dates should be given in full: 1729-1787. 1869-1912.

Make sure that pre-Gregorian dates are set out with cardinal numbers: 2nd day of the 8th month, 1st month of 1796.

The numerals 1 to 99 should be spelled out except for dates, percentages and where numbers are mentioned several times within a few lines of text. Spell out people?s ages and centuries.

Except for reviews and repeated references to the same work, footnotes are preferred to in-text citations. Footnotes will give only a brief reference, together with page and volume number; the relevant bibliographic data is provided in a reference list located at the end of the article. For monographs and articles, the brief footnote reference will usually be the author?s last name and date of publication. Works better known by title are best referred to by a shortened title.

Breman 1996, p. 25.

Dao de jing, p. 56.

Use ibid. to refer only to the immediately preceding reference or part of it; idem. and op. cit. should not be used.

Acknowledgements should appear at the end of the manuscript following the footnotes and before the reference list.

The reference list should include all the works cited, organized alphabetically according to the brief reference used in the notes. In general, each element in a reference entry is set off by periods.

Breman 1996.

Breman, Jan. Footloose Labour: Working in India's Informal Economy. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1996.
When the work is a translation, the following form should be used:
Maruyama 1974.

Maruyama Masao. Studies in the Intellectual History of Tokugawa Japan, trans. Mikiso Hane. Tokyo: University of Tokyo Press, 1974.
For works cited from non-English languages, use the following format:
Suga 2000.

Suga Yutaka (with characters if necessary). Shugen ga tsukuru minzokushi (characters) [Popular History created by the Shugen]. Tokyo: Yoshikawa kobunkan, 2000.
Journal articles should follow the format:
Brass 1980.

T. Brass. "Class Struggle and the Deproletarianisation of Agricultural Labour in Haryana (India)." The Journal of Peasant Studies 18:1 (1980), pp. 36-67.
Articles in edited volumes
In one edited volume

Breen 2000.

John Breen. "Ideologues, bureaucrats and priests: on 'Shinto' and 'Buddhism' in early Meiji Japan. In Shinto in History, Ways of the Kami, ed. John Breen and Mark Teeuwen. Richmond: Curzon, 2000.

In a multivolume series

Miyajima 1994.

Hiroshi Miyajima. "Higashi Ajia shono shakai no keisei" (characters) [The Emergence of Peasant Societies in East Asia] (in Japanese). In Choki shakai hendo (characters), vol. 6 of Ajia kara kangaeru (characters), ed. H. Miyajima et al. Tokyo: Tokyo Daigaku Shuppankai, 1994.



Editorial Board
Editor-in-Chief

HAMASHITA Takeshi?Kyoto University


Managing Editors

Gaynor SEKIMORI?IOC?University of Tokyo
YANAGISAWA Haruka?IOC?University of Tokyo



Executive Editors

Christian DANIELS?Tokyo University of Foreign Studies
Linda GROVE?Sophia University?Japan
IKEMOTO Yukio?IOC?University of Tokyo (Book Review Editor)
KURODA Akinobu?IOC?University of Tokyo
MASUYA Tomoko?IOC?University of Tokyo



Editorial Board
(* Regional Editor)

Chris BAKER?private scholar?Thailand
*Timothy BROOK?Toronto University?Canada
*CHANG Chi-hsiung?Academia Sinica?Taiwan
Mark ELLIOTT?University of Michigan?USA
HANEDA Masashi?IOC?University of Tokyo
Christian HENRIOT?University of Lyon?France
*Bernard HOURCADE?CNRS?France
D.N. JHA?University of Delhi?India
JOMO?K. S.?University of Malaya?Malaysia
KOJIMA Tsuyoshi?University of Tokyo
*Paul KRATOSKA?National University of Singapore?Singapore
LI Bozhong?Tsinghua University?China
Joseph P. McDERMOTT?University of Cambridge?UK
Tessa MORRIS-SUZUKI?Australian National University?Australia
Gyan PANDEY?Johns Hopkins University?USA
*Pasuk PHONGPAICHIT?Chulalongkorn University?Thailand
Kenneth POMERANZ?University of California?Irvine?USA
Mansur SEFATGOL?University of Tehran?Iran
*A.B. SHAMSUL?National University of Malaysia?Malaysia
*Elizabeth SINN?University of Hong Kong
Priscilla P. SOUCEK?Institute of Fine Arts?New York University?USA
TANAKA Akihiko?IOC?University of Tokyo
Brij TANKHA?University of Delhi?India
R. Bin WONG?University of California?Irvine?USA
YAMASHITA Shinji?University of Tokyo
YANO Michio?Kyoto Sangyo University?Japan




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