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Yearbook
1. Call for articles
CompaRes welcomes contributions from all areas of Iberian-Slavonic Comparative Research for its Yearbook – IberoSlavica. The Society wants to promote multicultural meetings of different peoples, topics, ideas and methodologies. Thus, the Iberian-Slavonic Yearbook is yet another attempt to respond to the new methodological directions of the post-modern comparativism, such as those based on "likeness and difference in the world of difference". IberoSlavica – will be a platform to promote meetings of those two European cultures - traditionally seen as distant and even opposed, wish to bring benefits of finding the new and deepening the old perspectives for both comparative research and cultural experience.
The Editors of IBEROSLAVICA look forward to receiving articles on various topics in all areas of Iberian-Slavonic Studies, but preferably in Literature, Translation, History, Philosophy, Psychology, Art, Religion, and Linguistics. The main purpose of the Yearbook is to present diversity of the contemporary Iberian-Slavonic Research interests in contacts through the centuries and discussions on points of comparison.
Categories of contributions:
- Regular research articles (length: 3500-8000 words, with a summary and bibliography).
- Shorter analyses and Inedita (up to 3500 words)
- Books, projects and events reviews and/or reports (up to 1500 words)
Evaluation and Selection:
The editors of CompaRes Yearbook plan to publish the submitted articles, if submitted by the deadline and provided they meet the required standard. The Advisory Board of the Yearbook will make a selection of contributions and inform authors of their decision within one moth from the submission deadline.
Language:
English is the official language of the Yearbook, but some exceptions may be accepted (papers in Slavic and Iberian languages would be translated into English or accompanied by the English abstract).
Deadlines:
Next submission deadline: 31 March, 2010.
Submission way:
Preferable via the Internet, sending articles to the Secretary of CompaRes: compares.compares@gmail.com, naming the file: ProposalCompaResYearbook+your name.
2. Rules for the Preparation of Manuscripts
Guidelines for the Preparation of a Manuscript for Submission to the Secretary of CompaRes:
- Format: Word (preferably 2003 or later versions)
- Font: Times New Roman
- Dimensions:
- Main text: 11
- Citations, when separated and books of Bibliography: 10
- Footnotes: 9
- Identification of the Author - in top left corner, Name and Institution
- The title of the main article: 14, bold – NO CAPITAL LETTERS
- Section titles, Bibliography title: 12, bold - NO CAPITAL LETTERS
- Books titles in Italics, with typical print and NO CAPITAL LETTERS
- Interline: 1,5
- Page setting: 24x16
- Summary goes before the main text corpus and after the title
END/FOOTNOTES
Quotations, paraphrases, statistics, interpretations, and significant phraseology taken from books and articles must be carefully and correctly cited in footnotes or endnotes. The suggested form for footnotes is indicated by the following examples:
Standard entry:
William H. McNeill, Venice: The Hinge of Europe, 1081-1797 (Chicago, 1974), 27
Multi-volume work:
Michael Roberts, Gustavus Adolphus: A History of Sweden, 1611-32 (2 vols., London, 1958), 2: 2-39.
Article within a book:
Lawrence Stone, 'The English Revolution', in Robert Forster & Jack P. Greene, eds., Preconditions of Revolution in Early Modern Europe (Baltimore, 1970), 57.
Article in a journal:
E. William Monter, 'Witchcraft in Geneva, 1537-1662', Journal of Modern History, 43 (1971), 195-7.
In citing a work for which the publication data has been given in an earlier footnote, it is not necessary to repeat the same data. Simply write the author’s surname, an abbreviated title and the page number. If the work was cited in the immediately preceding footnote, you do not even have to write the surname; simply write ibid. and the page number. The following sequence should make these practices clear:
6 J. P. Kenyon, The Stuart Constitution 1603-1688. Documents and Commentary (Cambridge, 1966), 203.
7 Ibid., p.2
8 John Stoye, Europe Unfolding, 1648-1688 (London, 1968), 85.
9 Kenyon, Stuart Constitution, 207.
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Articles and shorter analyses should include a bibliography. (Please, do not use CAPITAL LETTERS.) Bibliographies should be arranged in alphabetical order by author's surname and should distinguish between primary and secondary sources. If citing a whole book do not include page numbers. If citing an article in a book or journal, give the page numbers of the whole article.
Primary sources
Kenyon, J. P, ed., The Stuart Constitution 1603-1688. Documents and Commentary (Cambridge, 1966)
Secondary sources
McNeill, William H., Venice: The Hinge of Europe, 1081-1797 (Chicago, 1974)
Monter, E. William, 'Witchcraft in Geneva, 1537-1662', Journal of Modern History, vol. 43 (1971): 180-204
Stone, Lawrence, 'The English Revolution', in Robert Forster & Jack P. Greene, eds., Preconditions of Revolution in Early Modern Europe (Baltimore, 1970): 55-108
3. Editors and Advisory Board
IberoSlavica
Yearbook of the International Society for Iberian-Slavonic Studies - CompaRes
Editors:
Beata Elzbieta Cieszynska, Jesús Garcia Gabaldón, José Eduardo Franco, Margaret Tejerizo, Slava I. Yastremski, Teresa Pinheiro, Gueorgui Hristovsky, Hanna Jakubowicz-Batoréo
Secretaries:
Ines Costa, Ana Carina Prokopyszyn
Advisory Board:
Anna Klobucka (University of Massachusetts, Dartmouth, USA)
Annabela Rita (University of Lisbon)
Barbara Hlibowicka-Weglarz (Camoes Institute, Poland)
Danuta Künstler-Langner (Nicolaus Copernicus University, Torun, Poland)
Halina Janaszek-Ivanickova (Commission of Slavonic Comparative Literatures Studies at the International Committee of Slavists)
Jasmina Markic (University of Ljubljana, Slovenia)
Joanna Partyka (Polish Academy of Science)
Margaret Tejerizo (University of Glasgow, UK)
Paulo Mendes Pinto (University of Lisbon)
Pedro Calafate (University of Lisbon)
Wojciech Tomasik (Kazimierz Wielki University in Bydgoszcz, Poland)
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