期刊名称:MEMORY STUDIES

ISSN:1750-6980
出版频率:Quarterly
出版社:SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC, 2455 TELLER RD, THOUSAND OAKS, USA, CA, 91320
  出版社网址:http://www.uk.sagepub.com/journalsProdDesc.nav?prodId=Journal201801&ct_p=title&crossRegion=asia
影响因子: 0.541(2015年) 0.467(2014年) 0.509(2013年) 0.648 (2012年)
主题范畴:CULTURAL STUDIES;    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

Memory Studies is an international peer reviewed journal. It affords recognition, form, and direction to work in this nascent field, and provides a critical forum for dialogue and debate on the theoretical, empirical, and methodological issues central to a collaborative understanding of memory today.

Memory Studies examines the social, cultural, cognitive, political and technological shifts affecting how, what and why individuals, groups and societies remember, and forget. The journal responds to and seeks to shape public and academic discourses on the nature, manipulation, and contestation of memory in the contemporary era.

Despite the epistemological and causal significance attributed to memory in the study of such questions as the formation of personal and public identity, culture and politics, and social communities, there remains dramatic divergence on the basic concepts and methods of the area.

The field mobilises scholarship driven by problem or topic, rather than by singular method or tradition. We seek papers that highlight and deliberately negotiate divergence in backgrounds and assumptions, as opposed to those that avoid these issues.

Crucially, we welcome submissions which speak to a range of participants across memory studies.

Areas of dialogue and debate will include:

  • Everyday remembering
  • Collective, public, social and shared memory
  • Biography and history
  • Schema and narrative
  • The ethics of remembering and forgetting
  • Commemoration and remembrance
  • Organic and artificial memory
  • Media and mechanisms
  • Documentation and archive
  • Holocaust memory
  • Cosmopolitanism and globalization
  • Cultural memory and heritage
  • Catastrophe and trauma
  • Nation and nostalgia
  • Oral history and the culture of the witness
  • Memory and the politics of identity

Abstracting/Indexing:

 Arts & Humanities Citation Index

 Current Contents: Arts & Humanities

 Current Contents: Social & Behavioral Sciences

 Journal Citation Reports - Social Sciences Edition

 Social Sciences Citation Index (Web of Science)

 

 


Instructions to Authors

Memory Studies is an international peer reviewed journal. It affords recognition, form, and direction to work in this nascent field, and provides a critical forum for dialogue and debate on the theoretical, empirical, and methodological issues central to a collaborative understanding of memory today. 

Memory Studies examines the social, cultural, cognitive, political and technological shifts affecting how, what and why individuals, groups and societies remember, and forget. The journal responds to and seeks to shape public and academic discourses on the nature, manipulation, and contestation of memory in the contemporary era. 

Despite the epistemological and causal significance attributed to memory in the study of such questions as the formation of personal and public identity, culture and politics, and social communities, there remains dramatic divergence on the basic concepts and methods of the area.

The field mobilises scholarship driven by problem or topic, rather than by singular method or tradition. We seek papers that highlight and deliberately negotiate divergence in backgrounds and assumptions, as opposed to those that avoid these issues.

1. Peer review policy

Memory Studies operates a conventional double-blind reviewing policy in which the reviewers’ names are always concealed from the submitting author(s). Each submitted manuscript is reviewed by a minimum of two referees of appropriate standing in the field.

2. Article types

Articles should be between 6000 and 8000 words including notes and references and must be accompanied with a 150 word abstract and up to six key words.

Book reviews should be between 800 and 1500 words.

Suggestions for commentary pieces and works which fall outside of the parameters set out above are welcome, but please send suggestions in the first instance to: memorystudiesjournal@gmail.com

Crucially, we welcome submissions which speak to a range of participants across memory studies.

Areas of dialogue and debate in Memory Studies include but are not confined to:
- Everyday remembering
- Collective, public, social and shared memory
- Biography and history
- Schema and narrative
- The ethics of remembering and forgetting
- Commemoration and remembrance
- Organic and artificial memory
- Media and mechanisms
- Documentation and archive 
- Holocaust memory 
- Cosmopolitanism and globalization
- Cultural memory and heritage
- Catastrophe and trauma
- Nation and nostalgia
- Oral history and the culture of the witness
- Memory and the politics of identity

Books for Review
THREE copies of books for review should be sent to:
ARC Centre of Excellence in Cognition and its Disorders (CCD) 
and Department of Cognitive Science
Macquarie University
Sydney NSW 2109
AUSTRALIA
Emails: Marina Trakas (marina.trakas@mq.edu.au)
and Christopher McCarroll (christopher.mccarroll@mq.edu.au) 

Book Reviews:
We do not accept unsolicited book review essays.

Visit the website - www.memorystudies.net

3. How to submit your manuscript

Before submitting your manuscript, please ensure you carefully read and adhere to all the guidelines and instructions to authors provided below. Manuscripts not conforming to these guidelines may be returned.

Memory Studies is hosted on ScholarOne� Manuscripts, a web based online submission and peer review system � SAGE Track. Please read the Manuscript Submission guidelines below, and then simply visit http://mc.manuscriptcentral.com/MSSto login and submit your article online.

IMPORTANT: Please check whether you already have an account in the system before trying to create a new one. If you have reviewed or authored for the journal in the past it is possible that you will have had an account created. 

Papers must be written in English and not have been published or part-published already, nor be currently under consideration elsewhere.

All articles are refereed anonymously by at least two referees, so please upload two different versions of your manuscript to the submission system: oneanonymized manuscript, where you have removed your name from the file; and one complete manuscript, including your name, contact details and brief biography. 

Please send your paper as follows:

  1. Separate Cover Sheet:
    • Your name, address, affiliation and other contact details including email address
    • full article title
    • subtitle (optional)
    • preferred abbreviated running head
    • abstract (maximum 150 words)
    • keywords (maximum 6): in alphabetical order for searching online, preferably not words already in title
    • article word count (including references).
    • brief biography
  2. Article:
    • anonymised
    • main text: double-spaced
    • endnotes: double-spaced, at the end of the text, before the references
    • references: double-spaced at the end of the manuscript

Papers must be submitted conforming to the SAGE Harvard reference style (see guidelines on Manuscript style below).

4. Journal contributor�s publishing agreement 

Before publication SAGE requires the author as the rights holder to sign a Journal Contributor’s Publishing Agreement. SAGE’s Journal Contributor’s Publishing Agreement is an exclusive licence agreement which means that the author retains copyright in the work but grants SAGE the sole and exclusive right and licence to publish for the full legal term of copyright.� Exceptions may exist where an assignment of copyright is required or preferred by a proprietor other than SAGE. In this case copyright in the work will be assigned from the author to the society. For more information please visit ourFrequently Asked Questions on the SAGE Journal Author Gateway.

4.1 SAGE Choice and Open Access

If you or your funder wish your article to be freely available online to non subscribers immediately upon publication (gold open access), you can opt for it to be included in SAGE Choice, subject to payment of a publication fee. The manuscript submission and peer review procedure is unchanged. On acceptance of your article, you will be asked to let SAGE know directly if you are choosing SAGE Choice. To check journal eligibility and the publication fee, please visit SAGE Choice. For more information on open access options and compliance at SAGE, including self author archiving deposits (green open access) visit SAGE Publishing Policies on our Journal Author Gateway.

5. Declaration of conflicting interests

Within your Journal Contributor’s Publishing Agreement you will be required to make a certification with respect to a declaration of conflicting interests.Memory Studies does not require a declaration of conflicting interests but recommends you review the good practice guidelines on the SAGE Journal Author Gateway.

6. Other conventions

None applicable.

7. Acknowledgements 

Any acknowledgements should appear first at the end of your article prior to your Declaration of Conflicting Interests (if applicable), any notes and your References.

All contributors who do not meet the criteria for authorship should be listed in an `Acknowledgements� section. Examples of those who might be acknowledged include a person who provided purely technical help, writing assistance, or a department chair who provided only general support. Authors should disclose whether they had any writing assistance and identify the entity that paid for this assistance.

7.1 Funding Acknowledgement
To comply with the guidance for Research Funders, Authors and Publishers issued by the Research Information Network (RIN), Memory Studiesadditionally requires all Authors to acknowledge their funding in a consistent fashion under a separate heading.� All research articles should have a funding acknowledgement in the form of a sentence as follows, with the funding agency written out in full, followed by the grant number in square brackets:

This work was supported by the Medical Research Council [grant number xxx].

Multiple grant numbers should be separated by comma and space. Where the research was supported by more than one agency, the different agencies should be separated by semi-colon, with “and” before the final funder. Thus:

This work was supported by the Wellcome Trust [grant numbers xxxx, yyyy]; the Natural Environment Research Council [grant number zzzz]; and the Economic and Social Research Council [grant number aaaa].

In some cases, research is not funded by a specific project grant, but rather from the block grant and other resources available to a university, college or other research institution. Where no specific funding has been provided for the research we ask that corresponding authors use the following sentence:

This research received no specific grant from any funding agency in the public, commercial, or not-for-profit sectors.

Please include this information under a separate heading entitled “Funding” directly after any other Acknowledgements prior to your “Declaration of Conflicting Interests” (if applicable), any Notes and your References.

For more information on the guidance for Research Funders, Authors and Publishers, please visit: http://www.rin.ac.uk/funders-acknowledgement

8. Permissions

Authors are responsible for obtaining permission from copyright holders for reproducing any illustrations, tables, figures or lengthy quotations previously published elsewhere. For further information including guidance on fair dealing for criticism and review, please visit our Frequently Asked Questions on the SAGE Journal Author Gateway.

9. Manuscript style

9.1 File types .
Only electronic files conforming to the journal's guidelines will be accepted. Preferred formats for the text and tables of your manuscript are Word DOC, RTF, XLS. LaTeX files are also accepted.� Please also refer to additional guidelines on submitting artwork below.

9.2 Journal Style
Memory Studies conforms to the SAGE house style. Click here to review guidelines on SAGE UK House Style.

9.3 Reference Style
Memory Studies operates a SAGE Harvard reference style. Click here to review the guidelines on APA to ensure your manuscript conforms to this reference style.

9.4. Manuscript Preparation
The text should be double-spaced throughout and with a minimum of 3cm for left and right hand margins and 5cm at head and foot. Text should be standard 10 or 12 point.

9.4.1 Your Title, Keywords and Abstracts: Helping readers find your article online
The title, keywords and abstract are key to ensuring readers find your article online through online search engines such as Google. Please refer to the information and guidance on how best to title your article, write your abstract and select your keywords by visiting SAGE�s Journal Author Gateway Guidelines on How to Help Readers Find Your Article Online.

9.4.2 Corresponding Author Contact details
Provide full contact details for the corresponding author including email, mailing address and telephone numbers. Academic affiliations are required for all co-authors. These details should be presented separately to the main text of the article to facilitate anonymous peer review.

9.4.3 Guidelines for submitting artwork, figures and other graphics
For guidance on the preparation of illustrations, pictures and graphs in electronic format, please visit SAGE�s Manuscript Submission Guidelines. 

If, together with your accepted article, you submit usable colour figures, these figures will appear in colour online regardless of whether or not these illustrations are reproduced in colour in the printed version. If a charge applies you will be informed by your SAGE Production Editor. For specifically requested colour reproduction in print, you will receive information regarding the costs from SAGE after receipt of your accepted article.

9.4.4 Guidelines for submitting supplemental files
Memory Studies does not currently accept supplemental files.

9.4.5 English Language Editing services
Non-English speaking authors who would like to refine their use of language in their manuscripts might consider using a professional editing service.� Visit English Language Editing Services for further information.

10. After acceptance

10.1 Proofs
We will email a PDF of the proofs to the corresponding author.

10.2 E-Prints
SAGE provides authors with access to a PDF of their final article. For further information please visithttp://www.sagepub.co.uk/authors/journal/reprint.sp.

10.3 SAGE Production
At SAGE we place an extremely strong emphasis on the highest production standards possible. We attach high importance to our quality service levels in copy-editing, typesetting, printing, and online publication (http://online.sagepub.com/). We also seek to uphold excellent author relations throughout the publication process.

We value your feedback to ensure we continue to improve our author service levels. On publication all corresponding authors will receive a brief survey questionnaire on your experience of publishing in Memory Studies with SAGE.�

11. Further information

Any correspondence, queries or additional requests for information on the Manuscript Submission process should be sent to the Editorial Office as follows:

memorystudiesjournal@gmail.com


Editorial Board
Book Reviews Assistant:
Christopher McCarroll Macquarie University, Australia
Marina Trakas Macquarie University, Australia
Senior Editorial Assistant:
Andrea Hajek University of Glasgow, UK
Editorial Board:
Paloma Aguilar UNED, Spain
Aleida Assman University of Konstanz, Germany
Jan Assman Universität Konstanz
Mieke Bal University of Amsterdam, The Netherlands
Suzanne Bardgett Imperial War Museum London, UK
Amanda Barnier Macquarie University, Australia
Rosmarie Beier-de Haan Deutsches Historisches Museum, Germany
Andrew Blaikie University of Aberdeen, UK
Jerome Bourdon Tel Aviv University, Israel
Geoffrey C Bowker University of Pittsburgh, USA
Pascal Boyer Washington University in St Louis, USA
Michael Brennan University of Wisconsin, USA
John D. Brewer Aberdeen University, UK
Steven Brown University of Leicester
Mary Carruthers New York University, USA
David Cesarani Royal Holloway, University of London, UK
Paul Connerton Cambridge University, UK
Stuart Croft University of Warwick, UK
Rick Crownshaw Goldsmiths College, UK
Erika Doss University of Notre Dame, USA
Douwe Draaisma University of Groningen, The Netherlands
Jenny Edkins Aberystwyth University, UK
Astrid Erll Bergische Universität, Germany
Gary Alan Fine Northwestern University, USA
Robyn Fivush Emory University, USA
Saul Friedländer University of California, Los Angeles, USA
Joanne Garde-Hansen University of Warwick, UK
Paul Grainge University of Nottingham, UK
Ann Gray University of Lincoln, UK
Patrick Hagopian Lancaster University, UK
Geoffrey Hartman Association for Psychological Science, USA
Ann Heilmann University of Hull UK
Marianne Hirsch New York University, USA
William Hirst New School for Social Research, USA
Katharine Hodgkin University of East London, UK
Amy Holdsworth University of Glasgow, UK
Andreas Huyssen Columbia University, USA
Gregory V Jones University of Warwick, UK
Carolyn Kitch Temple University, USA
Annette Kuhn Lancaster University, UK
Alison Landsberg George Mason University, USA
Daniel Levy State University of New York at Stony Brook, USA
Nuria Lorenzo-Dus Swansea University, UK
Peter Lunt The University of Leicester
Sharon Macdonald University of Manchester, UK
Maryanne Martin Oxford University, UK
Rhiannon Mason University of Newcastle, UK
Scott McQuire University of Melbourne
Barbara Misztal University of Leicester, UK
Dirk Moses University of Sydney, Australia
Jeffrey Olick University of Virginia, USA
Michael Pickering Loughborough University, UK
Wendy Pullan Cambridge University, UK
Susannah Radstone University of East London, UK
Anna Reading King's College London, UK
Paula Reavey London South Bank University, UK
Elaine Reese University of Otago, New Zealand
Ann Rigney Utrecht University, Netherlands
Michael Rothberg University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, USA
David C Rubin Duke University, USA
Barry Schwartz University of Georgia, USA
Bill Schwarz Queen Mary, University of London, UK
Liz Stanley Manchester University
Charles Stone John Jay College of Criminal Justice, New York, USA
Marita Sturken New York University, Italy
Diana Taylor New York University, USA
Richard Terdiman University of California, Santa Cruz, USA
Karen Till University of London, UK
José Van Dijck University of Amsterdam
Kimberley Wade Warwick University, UK
Qi Wang Cornell University, USA
Harald Welzer Kulturwissenschaftliches Institut, Germany
James V Wertsch Washington University, USA
Alison Winter University of Chicago, USA
Jay Winter Association for Psychological Science, USA
James E Young University of Massachusetts, USA
Barbie Zelizer University of Pennsylvania, USA
Eviatar Zerubavel Rutgers University, USA

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