Calls for Papers (Journals/Edited Volumes/Book Series)
Call for Articles: Marine Corps History journal
Marine Corps History journal is accepting submissions of scholarly articles focused on new and unique research into the Marine Corps’ history. The editors also maintain a list of books available for review. The editors are currently accepting article submissions for the Summer 2024 issue. Deadline for submissions is 1 December 2023.
The collected volume "Slavery and the Slave Trade in the Red Sea Region, 7th – 20th c." will bring to light one of the oldest, most enduring and complex arenas of the slave trade on the globe. Linking the Mediterranean with the Indian Ocean and forming a maritime interface between northeast Africa and western Asia, the Red Sea has been one of the busiest and most important arteries on
Volume 4, Issue 1 (Autumn 2024 / Winter 2025)
Call for Papers
THEME: Women and Water: the Flow of Matriculture
Deadline for abstract submission: 15 June 2023
The relationship of women with water is deep, flowing among and between cultures as disparate as the Anishnaabeg of eastern Canada, the Celtic people of Europe, and the Ashanti of western Africa. This issue of Matrix seeks to explore that
The submission deadline for the Winter 2023/24 issue of Marine Corps History journal is approaching: 1 June.
If you are interested in submitting scholarly work focused on the history of the U.S. Marines for consideration in this issue, please contact the managing editor at stephani.miller@usmcu.edu for submission guidelines.
Past issues may be downloaded at: https://www.usmcu.edu/Outreach/Publishing/History-Division-Publications/MCH/
Stephani L. Miller
Managing Editor
Cultural Intertexts, an academic journal of Literature and Cultural Studies, ISSN 2393-0624, E-ISSN 2393-1078, invites proposals of original articles related to the theme: “Representations of the Danube in Literature and the Arts”.
From the Black Forest to the Black Sea, the Danube crosses ten countries and four capital cities, forming a site of cultural memory, both fluid because of the natural features of the river and static