期刊名称:DISCOURSE & SOCIETY

ISSN:0957-9265
出版频率:Bi-monthly
出版社:SAGE PUBLICATIONS LTD, 1 OLIVERS YARD, 55 CITY ROAD, LONDON, ENGLAND, EC1Y 1SP
  出版社网址:http://www.sagepub.co.uk/
期刊网址:http://www.sagepub.co.uk/journalsProdDesc.nav?prodId=Journal200873
影响因子: 1.137(2015年) 0.710(2014年) 0.862(2013年) 1.410 (2012年) 0.672(2011年)
主题范畴:COMMUNICATION;    PSYCHOLOGY, MULTIDISCIPLINARY;    SOCIOLOGY

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



About the journal

Discourse & Society is a multidisciplinary journal whose major aim is to publish outstanding research at the boundaries of discourse analysis and the social sciences. It focuses on explicit theory formation and analysis of the relationships between the structures of text, talk, language use, verbal interaction or communication, on the one hand, and societal, political or cultural micro- and macrostructures and cognitive social representations, on the other hand. That is, D&S studies society through discourse and discourse through an analysis of its socio-political and cultural functions or implications. Its contributions are based on advanced theory formation and methodologies of several disciplines in the humanities and social sciences.

Discourse & Society is an international journal. Its board members, contributors and readers are from many different countries, and this will also be reflected in the variety of the topics, approaches and cultural backgrounds of its articles.

Discourse & Society is issue-oriented. It does not primarily follow the fashion of specific academic schools or paradigms, but focuses on relevant social, political or cultural issues or problems, which often need a complex multi-disciplinary approach.

Discourse & Society is a critical journal. It favours contributions that pay attention to the detailed analysis of social and political relations of power, dominance and inequality, and to the role of discourse in their legitimation and reproduction in society, for instance in the domains of gender, race, ethnicity, class or world region.

Discourse & Society is an accessible journal. Its papers are written in a clear and pedagogic style, avoid esoteric jargon, and respect the needs and interests of readers of several levels of expertise in many countries and disciplines.


Instructions to Authors
Manuscript Submission Guidelines:

Copyright: Before publication authors are requested to assign copyright to SAGE Publications, subject to retaining their right to reuse the material in other publications written or edited by themselves and due to be published at least one year after initial publication in the Journal.

Number of copies: Of the first version only one copy should be sent by e-mail.

Typing: Articles submitted for publication must be typed double spaced throughout.

Length: The recommended length is 7000 words, including footnotes and references with an abstract of up to 150 words and up to 10 key words.

Titles: Titles and section headings should be clear and brief.

Quotations: Lengthy quotations (over 40 words) should be displayed, indented, in the text, without quotation marks. Short quotations in the text itself should be marked as such, either with quotation marks or by italics.

Language and Spelling: Only papers in English are published. Quotations of text fragments in othere languages should be followed by an English translation. Consistent UK or US spellings may be used.

Tables and figures: Tables and figures should have short descriptive titles and all artwork should be at least 300 dpi.

Notes: Essential notes should be indicated by superscript numbers in the text and typed at the end of the text.

References: References cited in the text should read: Brown (1987: 63¨C4), Brown and Smith (1984, 1989). Use ¡®et al.¡¯ for more than two authors. The letters a, b, c, etc., should be used for different works by the same author in the same year. All text references should be listed alphabetically after the notes, as follows: Books: Van Dijk, T. A. and Kintsch, W. (1983) Strategies of Discourse Comprehension. New York: Academic Press. Articles: Billig, M. (1988a) ¡®Rhetorical and Historical Aspects of Attitudes: The Case of the British Monarchy¡¯, Philosophical Psychology 1(1): 191¨C217.

Biography: Authors should supply an auto-biography of 50¨C100 words.

Cover sheets: The paper should have a "cover sheet" with the following information: full name; institutional, private and email address; address for proofs and offprints; telephone and fax numbers; short title and size in words and bytes. The cover sheet should be part of the same file as the paper.

Offprints: Authors receive proofs and a final pdf of their papers plus one copy of the journal and are responsible for obtaining copyright permission for reproducing any illustrations, tables, figures or lengthy quotations previously published elsewhere.

Discussion section: Contributions to this secrtion of the journal should be 1000 words maximum with a short descriptive title (not ¡®Comments on . . .¡¯) and a cover sheet with details listed above for article submissions. Proofs will not be sent but each author will receive a pdf of the final version.

Mailing instructions and editorial address: First versions of papers should be sent by e-mail only, in one file (including figures, tables, and appendices) preferably in WORD (formats .doc or .rtf), to the editor at the following address: journals[at]discourses.org. Please write on the subject line: Paper for DISCOURSE & SOCIETY. The file should be attached to an accompanying message, in which you should identify yourself with your full name and address, and address the editor by name, one of the ways to distinguish your submission from --unfortunately all too frequent -- SPAM. For the same reason, it is also strongly recommended that you add your full name to your e-mail address in the header of your message when that address does not clearly identify who you are; if necessary please edit the settings of your e-mail program accordingly. Do not attach your paper to a message without a personalized letter to the editor.

Questions and information: For questions about submissions and editorial policy, write to the editor: journals[at]discourses.org.

Preferred Papers for Discourse & Society

Contributions to Discourse & Society should satisfy the following criteria:

1. Systematic discourse analysis. Discourse & Society is primarily a discourse analytical journal. That is, articles should provide a detailed, systematic and theoretically based analysis of text and talk. It is insufficient to merely quote, summarize or paraphrase such discourse. Articles should focus on specific structures or strategies of discourse that are not self-evident to the casual reader. These may include grammatical, stylistic, rhetorical, narrative or argumentative structures; cognitive processes and mental representations; pragmatic, conversational or interactional dimensions of socially situated talk; or the political or cultural functions or implications of such discourses, among many other properties of communicative events. Discourse & Society does not publish exclusively theoretical papers, but each paper should feature a prominent theoretical section and a critical review of the relevant literature as a foundation for empirical research. Theoretical notes or short discussion pieces are welcome for the D&S Forum section. It goes without saying that both theory and analysis should make an original contribution to the field.

2. Explicit social analysis. As its title suggests, Discourse & Society particularly welcomes articles that study the social contexts of discourse, the discursive dimensions of social structures or any other relation between discourse and society (including politics and culture). Social and political analyses should be explicit and theoretically based. Ideally, D&S articles should provide a unique integration of discourse analysis and social analysis. Among other aims, Discourse & Society encourages work that critically studies relevant social, political or cultural issues and problems, such as the discursive aspects of various types of domination, inequality and resistance.

3. A sizeable corpus of data. Articles are preferred that are based on a sizeable corpus of interesting texts or talk collected by the author(s) themselves, and not merely on a few discourses. Authors are expected to have a thorough knowledge of, and experience with, the corpus, domain or genre of discourse being analysed, for instance as a result of an extended research project, so as to facilitate empirical generalizations. Analyses should be illustrated by several extracts quoted in the text.

4. Multidisciplinary, multicultural, international. The study of the relations between discourse and society takes place in several disciplines, in many countries and by women and men from many different cultural backgrounds. Discourse & Society highly values this diversity and particularly invites contributions which reflect such diversity in their authorship, theories, methods, data and the use of scholarly literature.

5. Accessibility. Discourse & Society aims to be accessible to readers from a broad range of disciplines, and of various levels of specialization and expertise, especially including students. For theoretical, methodological, pedagogical and social reasons, therefore, contributions should be well-organized, have a clear style, avoid esoteric jargon, and explain unfamiliar or new technical concepts.

Editorial address

Manuscripts should be submitted by e-mail attachment to the editor, Teun A. van Dijk, at the following address: journals[at]discourses.org.

Authors who have no access to e-mail can send their manuscript to: Teun A. van Dijk, Universitat Pompeu Fabra, Facultat de Traducci¨°, Rambla 32, Barcelona 08002, Spain.


Editorial Board
Co-Editors
Michael Billig Loughborough University, UK
Teresa E Carbo Mexico City, Mexico
Ruth Wodak University of Lancaster, UK
 
Reviews Editor
Ingrid Piller Basel University, Switzerland
 
Honorary Board
Noam Chomsky Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Aaron V Cicourel University of California, San Diego, USA
Doris Graber University of Illinois at Chicago, USA
Stuart Hall Goldsmiths College, London, UK
Michael Halliday Australia
Cheris Kramarae University of Oregon, Eugene, USA
Tove Skutnabb-Kangas Roskilde University, Denmark
 
Advisory Board
Jan Blommaert University of London, UK
Adriana Bolivar Central University of Venezuela, Venezuela
Charles Briggs University of California, San Diego, USA
Deborah Cameron University of Oxford, UK
Isolda E. Carranza Universidad Nacional de Córdoba, Argentina
Paul Chilton University of East Anglia, UK
Lilie Chouliaraki Copenhagen Business School, Denmark
John D H Downing Southern Illinois University, USA
Alessandro Duranti University of California, Los Angeles, USA
Susan Ehrlich York University, Canada
Norman Fairclough University of Lancaster, UK
Sonja K Foss University of Colorado at Denver
David Greatbatch University of Nottingham, UK
Reiko Hayashi Konan Women's University, Japan
John Heritage University of California, Los Angeles, USA
Janet Holmes Victoria University of Wellington, New Zealand
Sachiko Ide Japanese Women's University, Tokyo, Japan
Siegfried Jäger University of Duisburg, Germany
Adam Jaworski University of Wales, Cardiff, UK
Celia Kitzinger University of York, UK
Helga Kotthoff Pedagogical University of Freiburg, Germany
Gunther Kress Institute of Education, UK
Robin Lakoff University of California, Berkeley, USA
Michelle M. Lazar National University of Singapore, Singapore
Theo van Leeuwen University of Technology, Sydney, Australia
Martin Montgomery University of Strathclyde, UK
Dennis Mumby University of North Carolina, USA
Sik Hung Ng City University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong
Laura Pardo Conicet Ciafic, Buenos Aires, Argentina
Professor Anssi Perdkyld University of Helsinki, Finland
Jonathan Potter Loughborough University
Luisa Martin Rojo University Autónoma de Madrid, Spain
Christina Schäffner Aston University, UK
Ron Scollon USA
Professor Shi-Xu Zhejiang University, China
Geneva Smitherman Michigan State University, USA
Candace West University of California, Santa Cruz, USA
Uli Windisch University of Geneva, Switzerland
Saida Yahya-Othman University of Dar es Salaam, Tanzania
Kwesi Yankah University of Ghana, Legon, Ghana
 

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