You are here
Announcements
Recent blog posts
- Male Sex Trade Worker
- Communities resisting UK company's open pit coal mine
- THE ANARCHIC PLANET
- The Future Is Anarchy
- The Implosion Of Capitalism And The Nation-State
- Anarchy as the true reality
- Globalization of Anarchism (Anti-Capital)
- Making Music as Social Action: The Non-Profit Paradigm
- May the year 2007 be the beginning of the end of capitalism?
- The Future is Ours Anarchic
Anarchism Issue Planned for Journal for Study of Radicalism
April 23, 2009 - 6:59am -- jim
Anarchism Issue Planned for Journal for Study of Radicalism
JSR: Journal for the Study of Radicalism invites article submissions for a
special issue on anarchism. We particularly are interested in articles that
analyze a particular individual, group, or current within the broader
subject. We encourage articles on lesser known aspects of contemporary or
historical manifestations of anarchism, as well as contested areas within
anarchism. Topics might include black bloc tactics, the history of _Fifth
Estate_, _Green Anarchy_ and other periodicals, conflicts between anarchist
perspectives, violence and non-violence in anarchism, histories of
anarchism, anarchist communities, or international aspects of contemporary
anarchism. Generally speaking, the journal's historical focus is from the
early modern period to the present, and the geographic range is global, so
we'd be interested in articles discussing groups or individuals whose
influence is international, though this is not essential. JSR is an
interdisciplinary journal, and we encourage articles from a range of
disciplinary backgrounds. We are especially interested in articles that
include some original fieldwork, for instance, interviews or use of archival
sources.
Submissions should be 20-30 pages in length and conform to the Chicago
Manual of Style with endnotes. Please include a one-paragraph abstract, and
a brief author bio. Images for possible use in an article should be 300 dpi,
and authors are responsible for requesting and receiving permission to
reprint images for scholarly use. Send queries, proposals, and articles to
jsr@msu.edu. The deadline for submitting completed articles is September 1,
2009, and we encourage early submission to facilitate the review process.
See http://www.msu.edu/jsr and www.msupress.msu.edu/journals/jsr for more
information on the journal.
JSR-a print academic journal published by Michigan State University Press-is
devoted to serious, scholarly exploration of the forms, representations,
meanings, and historical influences of radical social movements. With
sensitivity and openness to historical and cultural contexts of the term, we
loosely define "radical," as distinguished from "reformers," to mean groups
who seek revolutionary alternatives to hegemonic social and political
institutions, and who use violent or non-violent means to bring about
socio-political change.
Anarchism Issue Planned for Journal for Study of Radicalism
JSR: Journal for the Study of Radicalism invites article submissions for a special issue on anarchism. We particularly are interested in articles that analyze a particular individual, group, or current within the broader subject. We encourage articles on lesser known aspects of contemporary or historical manifestations of anarchism, as well as contested areas within anarchism. Topics might include black bloc tactics, the history of _Fifth Estate_, _Green Anarchy_ and other periodicals, conflicts between anarchist perspectives, violence and non-violence in anarchism, histories of anarchism, anarchist communities, or international aspects of contemporary anarchism. Generally speaking, the journal's historical focus is from the early modern period to the present, and the geographic range is global, so we'd be interested in articles discussing groups or individuals whose influence is international, though this is not essential. JSR is an interdisciplinary journal, and we encourage articles from a range of disciplinary backgrounds. We are especially interested in articles that include some original fieldwork, for instance, interviews or use of archival sources.
Submissions should be 20-30 pages in length and conform to the Chicago Manual of Style with endnotes. Please include a one-paragraph abstract, and a brief author bio. Images for possible use in an article should be 300 dpi, and authors are responsible for requesting and receiving permission to reprint images for scholarly use. Send queries, proposals, and articles to jsr@msu.edu. The deadline for submitting completed articles is September 1, 2009, and we encourage early submission to facilitate the review process. See http://www.msu.edu/jsr and www.msupress.msu.edu/journals/jsr for more information on the journal.
JSR-a print academic journal published by Michigan State University Press-is devoted to serious, scholarly exploration of the forms, representations, meanings, and historical influences of radical social movements. With sensitivity and openness to historical and cultural contexts of the term, we loosely define "radical," as distinguished from "reformers," to mean groups who seek revolutionary alternatives to hegemonic social and political institutions, and who use violent or non-violent means to bring about socio-political change.