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期刊名称:PHILOLOGICAL Quarterly

ISSN:0031-7977
出版频率:Quarterly
出版社:UNIV IOWA, ENGLISH PHILOSOPHY BLDG DEPT PUBLICATIONS LOU EICHLER, IOWA CITY, USA, IA,52242
期刊网址:http://english.uiowa.edu/pq/
主题范畴:LANGUAGE & LINGUISTICS;    LITERATURE

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



About the journal

PQ is an international refereed journal that welcomes submissions on any aspect of medieval European and modern literature and culture. Special issues on particular themes, under guest editorship, also appear regularly in our pages, as do solicited book reviews. Some of the articles we publish pay close attention to textual detail, while others take textuality itself as a central analytical category, a realm that includes physical bibliography, the sociology of knowledge, the history of reading, reception studies, and other fields of inquiry. To be published in PQ a manuscript should be persuasive in its claims, careful in its handing of evidence, accessible in its wrtten style, and current in its consideration of relevant scholarship.

Philological Quarterly (ISSN 0031-7977) is issued by the University of Iowa, Department of English, in Winter, Spring, Summer, and Fall. Subscription rates for individuals: one year, $20.00; two years, $36.00. For institutions and libraries: one year $60.00, two years $95.00, three years $140.00. Foreign subscribers add $10.00 for postage. Single copies are $10.00.  For current subscriptions and back issues contact Publications Order Department, University of Iowa, 2222 Old Hwy 218 S., Iowa City, IA 52242, Phone - 319-384-3808, Fax - 319-384-3918, E-mail - debra-harland@uiowa.edu.


Instructions to Authors

Instructions for PQ Contributors

PQ follows the Chicago Manual of Style, 15th ed., with minor exceptions as noted below in paragraphs 6 and 10, and prefers that bibliographic citations appear in endnotes rather than as a list of works cited. Normal length for an article is roughly 6400-8000 words.

  1. Spelling should follow American conventions except in quotations, which reproduce the original spelling exactly.
  2. Numbers one through ninety-nine are spelled out in the text except in dates and page numbers. Roman numerals should be converted to Arabic. Dates should appear in European style: 25 December 1965. Numbers that identify centuries are also spelled out ("eighteenth century"). Em dashes should appear as -- or ? not as a hyphen (-) or en dash (?, and without a space between the characters preceding or following it; en dashes serve to connect inclusive numbers (1625?660).
  3. Ellipsis should not ordinarily be placed at the beginning or end of quotations, but when needed is indicated by three spaced periods, or by four periods if it falls at the end of a sentence within the quotation and without square brackets. Quotations of more than eight lines of type are set off from the text. Parenthetic citations of poetry following a block quotation drop to the line below the final line of the quotation. Line breaks in poetry are indicated by a forward slash with spaces on both sides (e.g., "a red wheel / barrow"). Short quotations should be placed in double quotation marks and followed by an endnote or by parenthetic citation if several follow in a row. Multiple citations, especially of primary texts, should appear parenthetically once the source has been noted. Make an effort to reduce a large number of successive notes that refer to a range of pages within a single book, but also avoid stranding parenthetic numbers with no clear reference.
  4. Old English characters (? ? ? ? ?? etc.) require consistent coding; ordinarily we do not set Greek or Hebrew quotations.
  5. Works divided into sections should be indicated by separating the elements with periods: Macbeth 1.1.1?0 refers to Act I, scene 1, lines 1-10 of the play; Faerie Queene 1.1.1?0 would refer to Book I, canto 1, stanzas 1?0 of Spenser's poem. In certain cases it might be necessary to use abbreviations for clarity, "chap." for "chapter," "n" or "nn" for notes, "pt." for part, and so forth. Verso and recto, when they appear, are in lower case: fol. 1r-v, fols. 1r-10v. For poetry, use line numbers, not page numbers, and do not abbreviate "line" as "l." Avoid whenever possible idem, passim, op. cit., and loc. cit.; f and ff should also be avoided. Roman (not italicized) Ibid. can be used sparingly.
  6. In PQ's house style we omit the place of publication for well known university presses, and we also abbreviate "University" as "U." For example, "Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press, 1999), 77" should appear as "(Harvard U. Press, 1999), 77." Provide foreign places of publication in English (Munich, not München), and if the location of an American city needs clarification (Venice, CA) specify the state's name by using U. S. postal codes. Usually, supplying a single place of publication will suffice ("London," e.g., rather than "London and New York").
  7. With proper names that end in an s that is unpronounced or pronounced eez, avoid the possessive form 's and add an apostrophe only: "Descartes' philosophy," "Euripides' tragedies," "Sophocles' tragedies." (Traditional usage favors other exceptions?Jesus' name" and "Moses' law"—but CMS 7.23 prefers "Jesus's contemporaries.")
  8. Citations give inclusive page numbers as follows (see CMS 9.64): 1?9 use all digits; 100 or multiples use all digits (100?04, 1100?113); 101 through 109, 201 through 209, etc., uses a single digit in the second place (501?); 110 through 199, etc., use two or more digits as required (322?6; 498?32. 1085?9).
  9. Quoted matter in block quotations appears in double quotation marks, and titles within italicized titles also appear between double quotation marks. American-style double quotation marks replace chevrons in quotations of foreign languages, which generally follow the original punctuation while adapting some conventions to English-language rules (see CMS 11.87).
  10. Provide the original date of publication for reprints, thus: F. O. Matthiessen,  American Renaissance: Art and Expression in the Age of Emerson and Whitman (1941; repr. Oxford U. Press, 1968).
  11. Do not supply the issue number of a journal article unless the publication paginates each issue separately, e.g., Melvyn New, "Taking Care: A Slightly Levinasian Reading of Dombey and Son," PQ 84 (2005): 80. Note too that we abbreviate the following journal titles: EIC, ELH, ELR, JEGP, JHI, MLQ, MP, N&Q, PMLA, PQ, RES, SAQ, SEL, SP, TLS, YES.
  12. Book reviewers should supply bibliographical information at the top of the review in the following form: The Worlds of Renaissance Melancholy: Robert Burton in Context by Angus Gower. Cambridge U. Press, 2006. Pp. xii + 338. $90 cloth. The book under review is cited parenthetically by page number; reference to other books should also appear in parentheses (e.g., Angus Gower, The Worlds of Renaissance Melancholy [Cambridge U. Press, 2006]).

Editorial Board

Alvin Snider
Editor

Kerry Delaney
Editorial Assistant

 

Editorial Board

Lori A. Branch
Matthew P. Brown
Huston Diehl
Eric Gidal
Miriam A. Gilbert

Kathy Lavezzo
Judith M. Pascoe
Claire Sponsler
Jonathan Wilcox




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