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期刊名称:ARCHITECTURAL HISTORY

ISSN:0066-622X
出版频率:Annual
出版社:CAMBRIDGE UNIV PRESS, EDINBURGH BLDG, SHAFTESBURY RD, CAMBRIDGE, ENGLAND, CB2 8RU
  出版社网址:http://www.sahgb.org.uk/
期刊网址:http://www.sahgb.org.uk/index.cfm/display_page/Publications
主题范畴:ARCHITECTURE;    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

The Society's principal publication is Architectural History. Published each autumn, this is one of the world's leading periodicals in the field. The architecture of the British Isles has always been one of the particular strengths of the journal, but there are no geographical or chronological limits to its range, which continues to expand. All issues of Architectural History from three or more years ago are available for consultation on-line through JSTOR through subscribing institutions. All members receive the journal.


Instructions to Authors

Architectural History - Notes for Contributors

Submitting an Article

The editor of Architectural History welcomes submission of articles for consideration. The deadline for receipt of manuscripts is 1 October every year, for publication the following September. Please consult the editor Professor Judi Loach (email loachj@cardiff.ac.uk) for details of address for sending your article.

Notes for Contributors

Please keep the following in mind when preparing articles for Architectural History.

Refereeing procedure

In the first instance you are providing the editor copy for sending on to two anonymous referees. Refereeing is anonymous in both directions, so please ensure that your name is not on the copy you send in, but separately in a covering letter. Two copies of your typescript should be submitted (for sending to two referees), of which at least one should be a top copy (if a referee is dilatory we may decide to send your work out to a third referee, and satisfactory results cannot always be obtained if additional copies have to be made from photocopies). For the same reason, please make sure you have a new enough cartridge in your printer. You should keep a copy of the original typescript.

Send good photocopies (two sets) of photographs and other illustrations in the first instance (for forwarding to referees - it is not worth risking originals in the post at this stage); originals will be required by 21 March in the year of publication if the article is accepted, so you are advised to obtain them as soon as possible. It is your responsibility to obtain illustrations suitable for reproduction, and to obtain permission (in writing) to reproduce them if necessary. Illustration and reproduction charges are at your expense; the journal has a print run of 1200 and is available on JSTOR after three years.

Tables and digitised illustrations should not be supplied in the same files as the text.

If your article is accepted for publication you will be required to rewrite in accordance with comments made by referees and editor. You should also enclose all copies of the reports from both referees and any comments from the editor, indicating how these have been followed, or explaining why they have not been.

Illustrations

Illustrations should be of the highest possible quality. They should be presented as black-and-white prints, line drawings, colour transparencies, or as scans (professional quality only since scans from low-cost flat-bed scanners are not normally adequate). Digital images taken in situ by the author are acceptable provided that good quality lenses and adequate lighting are employed.

All illustrations should be clearly labeled with a) the author's name and b) the figure number used in the text and list of captions. If authors have any preference as to scale at which particular illustrations are shown, or any specific juxtapositions, this should be indicated (though it may not always be possible to accommodate all requests). Please keep in mind the scale of reduction in reproduction when applying lettering and tones to drawings.

Text

(See also further notes below).

Your typescript, including picture captions, footnote references, and extended quotations, should be double-spaced with wide margins. Use the facility in Word for double spacing (Format ¡ú Paragraph). Do not use the "return" key for this purpose.

Your typescript, including picture captions, footnote references, and extended quotations, should again be double-spaced, this time to leave room for marking up by the editor.

Do not justify the right margin. Although attractive, some currently available typefaces should be avoided, as they leave little room for insertions. For marking-up purposes, the best typefaces are nearest to those produced by typewriters, eg. Courier. Underlining or italics may be used for words to be italicized in the final printing.

Each paragraph, except the first in any sub-section of the article, must be indented by a single tab space; do not leave extra space between paragraphs. Please do not use a mix of tabs and spaces. Sub-divisions in the article, e.g. before a sub-heading, can however be marked by a blank line in which the author should write, in pencil, 'extra space'. Sub-headings should not be typed in capitals or underlined.

Spelling and punctuation should follow the MHRA Style Guide (2002), ISBN 0 947623 62 0, available from Maney Publishing, Hudson Road, Leeds LS9 7DL, England for £5.00 (US$12.00) including postage and packing. Briefly, this means British English spelling, but with 'ize', not 'ise' where both spellings are permissible.

The punctuation of note references should follow the journal's conventions. Dates take the forms '1711-14', '1933-39', 'October 1992', '11 May 1994', and 'architecture in the seventeenth century', and 'late seventeenth-century architecture'. Compound adjectives should be hyphenated: 'nineteenth-century buildings', 'double-pile houses'. In general, spell out numbers one to a hundred, unless they appear in lists.

Quotation marks (single) should include only the punctuation in the matter quoted. Quotations longer than about 40 words should be set out: that is, typed after a blank line, without indentation or quotation marks, and with a blank line following.

Typesetters' practice is to set the text first, and then the endnotes. Therefore please begin the notes on a new sheet of paper. Precede them with acknowledgements, photographic credits, and an appropriate key to abbreviations. It is courteous to check the wording of acknowledgements with the persons named!

Notes must be arranged, by number, in order of their citation in the text. Please do not use automatic note-numbering routines. Type the number references in the text either as superior figures or as figures within square brackets and save the footnotes as a separate file.

Strict adherence to the standard form is required because typesetters will be obliged to query exceptions, which is time-consuming and expensive. Some models follow (NB the title of the book or of the periodical should be in italics; if these guidelines have been sent to you by
e-mail italics may have vanished en route):

Single-volume book:

Stanley Lane-Poole, The Art of the Saracens in Egypt (London, 1886), pp. 86-88, 138, 272-73.

Note the conventions for contracting page numbers (pp. 4-6, 24-26, 104-06, 324-26).

Multi-volume book:

Sir James B. Burke, A Visitation of Seats and Arms of the Noblemen and Gentlemen of Great Britain, 4 vols (London, 1853), II, 92.

Multi-edition book: book in a series:

Kerry Downes, Hawksmoor, Studies in Architecture II, 2nd edn (London, 1979).

Article in a journal:

John Lord, 'Sir John Vanbrugh and the lst Duke of Ancaster: Newly Discovered Documents', Architectural History, 34 (1991), pp. 136-44 (p. 142).

Article in a book; edited work:

Frank Arneil Walker, 'The Glasgow Grid', in Order in Space and Society: Architectural Form and its Context in the Scottish Enlightenment, ed. Thomas A. Markus (Edinburgh, 1982), pp. 155-99 (p. 18).

The last two examples give the first and last page numbers of the article, as well as (if required) those of the particular reference. The full page-reference is essential for readers who want to trace an article, e.g. through an inter-library loan. For the same reason, it is important to list the author's first name(s) as they appear in the work cited.

Article in a multi-volume book:

Waltraud Ernst, 'Asylums in Alien Places: the Treatment of the European Insane in British India', in The Anatomy of Madness: Essays In the History of Psychiatry, ed. W. F. Bynum and others, 3 vols (London, 1985-88), III The Asylum and its Psychiatry (1988), pp. 48-70.

Unpublished theses and dissertations:

Christopher Paul Philo, 'The Space Reserved for Insanity: Studies in the Historical Geography of the Mad-Business in England and Wales' (doctoral thesis, University of Cambridge, 1992), p. 15.

Back references:

Philo, 'Space Reserved', ch. 3; Ernst, 'Asylums', p. 5; Burke, Visitation, III, pp. 18-19.

Foreign-language titles; chapter-and-verse; exhibition catalogues:

Vitruvius, De architectura, I, 1, 5; La Leçon de Charcot: voyage dans une toile, ed. Nadine Simon-Dhouailly, catalogue of an exhibition at the Musue de l'assistance publique de Paris (1986), no. 91, p. 49; Giuseppe Marchini, 'Della costruzione di S. Maria delle Carceri in Prato', Archivio Storico Pratese, 14 (1936), pp. 1-14 (p. 12).

Languages other than English capitalize only nouns in titles which would be capitalized in ordinary prose in that language, which in German means every noun; French capitalizes the first noun of the title, whether the first word or not.

Indicate the proper location of illustrations both in the running text (as Fig. 1, Figs 2 and 3, etc.) and by writing, in pencil on the hard copy, 'Fig. 1 etc. near here' in the margin, and circling this instruction.

Picture captions should be typed double-spaced on a separate sheet. Include the source of the illustration in parenthesis after the identification; photo-credits are listed after the acknowledgements.

The cleaner the copy sent to the printer, the fewer editorial and printers' errors occur. It may determine whether or not your article is published, or at least whether or not your article is included immediately or is delayed to the following year. The Society reserves the right to charge authors for their own corrections at the following rates per line affected - £1.30 at first proof and £1.50 at second proof.

Further notes on the preparation of text for publication in Architectural History

1. Text should be supplied in MS Word as an electronic file and sent to the editor as an attachment. Hard copies of the text and the illustrations should be sent by post at the same time.

2. Please do not use 'hard' page breaks. These are recorded when you save the file and cause problems when your article is re-justified as typesetting.

3. Please do not use 'hard' hyphens to improve word splits at line endings. The printer's line endings will be different but hard hyphens will not disappear. Please do not put extra space between paragraphs. Start paragraphs with a single tab rather than multiple spaces.

4. If your article contains unusual characters or accents, please list them on a separate sheet of paper noting the codes or other means you have used to obtain them (e.g. a [u] for â). Codes should be used consistently.

5. Be consistent in the means by which you obtain indenting and tabular effects. Please use the tabulation facility available in Word to achieve the required indents and column positions. Do not use a mixture of tab settings and spaces.

6. Complex tables may not always convert easily to typesetting. In such cases they will be re-keyed by the printer. Please always remove them from the text leaving a marker in the text (e.g. [TABLE 1]) to indicate position. Supply them in a separate file and as clearly legible hard copy.


Editorial Board
Membership: contact Dr Alex Bremner (School of Arts, Culture and Environment, University of Edinburgh, 20 Chambers Street, Edinburgh, EH1 1JZ) membership@sahgb.org.uk

Events: contact Dr Stewart Abbott,18Hubert Road,St Cross,Winchester SO23 9RG; stewart.abbott@ntlworld.com

Conferences: Dr Elizabeth Green for 2009 Liverpool: liverpoolconference@sahgb.org.uk

Architectural History Editor: contact Professor Judi Loach (30 Africa Gardens, Cardiff, CF14 3BU) architecturalhistory@sahgb.org.uk

Newsletter: contact Dr Zeynep Kezer (School of Architecture and Planning, University of Newcastle upon Tyne, The Quadrangle, Newcastle upon Tyne, NE1 7RU) newsletter@sahgb.org.uk

Reviews: books for review should be sent to Dr Kathryn Morrison (English Heritage, Brooklands, 24 Brooklands Avenue, Cambridge, CB2 8BU), reviewseditor@sahgb.org.uk

Publications: contact Dr Simon Oakes (St John's College, Oxford, OX1 3JP) publications@sahgb.org.uk

Finances: contact David Lermon (Beech House, Cotswold Avenue, Lisvane, Cardiff, CF14 0TA) treasurer@sahgb.org.uk

Education and the Essay Medal: Dr Julian Holder (English Heritage (North West), Suites 3.3 and 3.4,Canada House, 3, Chepstow Street, Manchester, M1 5FW), education@sahgb.org.uk

Website: for matters of content and general enquiries, contact Dr Robert Proctor, webadmin@sahgb.org.uk

The Chairman: Professor Andrew Ballantyne (School of Architecture, Planning and Landscape, Newcastle University, Newcastle upon Tyne, NE1 7RU), chair@sahgb.org.uk.



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