8.0338 Early Modern Literary Studies (1/128)
Elaine Brennan (EDITORS@BROWNVM.BITNET)
Thu, 1 Dec 1994 09:06:36 EST
Humanist Discussion Group, Vol. 8, No. 0338. Thursday, 1 Dec 1994.
Date: Wed, 30 Nov 94 20:50:20 PST
From: emls@arts.ubc.ca (R. G. Siemens, Editor, EMLS)
Subject: Announcing EMLS: A Journal
*** Would you please forward the following announcement to HUMANIST
participants? Thank you. ***
[This message will be cross-posted; please excuse duplication]
EARLY MODERN LITERARY STUDIES:
A JOURNAL OF SIXTEENTH- AND SEVENTEENTH-CENTURY ENGLISH LITERATURE
Announcing Early Modern Literary Studies, a refereed journal
in electronic form which intends to serve both as a formal arena
for scholarly discussion and as an academic resource for
researchers in the area. Articles in EMLS will examine English
literature, literary culture, and language during the sixteenth
and seventeenth centuries from a variety of perspectives; well-
considered responses to published papers will also be published
as part of a Readers' Forum. Reviews in EMLS will evaluate
recent work in the area as well as academic tools of interest to
scholars in the field. Our Internet site will also gather and
maintain links to useful on-line resources.
EMLS (ISSN 1201-2459) will be published three times a year for
the on-line academic community by the University of British
Columbia's English Department, with the support of the
University's Library and Arts Computing Centre.
Our first issue will appear in Spring 1995.
AVAILABILITY
EMLS will be available free of charge in hypertextual format
on the World Wide Web at
http://unixg.ubc.ca:7001/0/e-sources/emls/emlshome.html
It will also be available in ASCII format for retrieval using
GOPHER at
edziza.arts.ubc.ca /english/emls
Our site on the World Wide Web will be active, though still under
construction, as of December 1, 1994.
EDITORIAL GROUP
The EMLS Editorial Group is representative of the on-line
academic community as a whole and includes scholars with wide-
ranging interests and experience, from junior to well-established
senior academics.
Senior Editorial and Advisory Board:
Gordon Campbell, University of Leicester
Hardy M. Cook III, Bowie State University
Roy Flannagan, Ohio University
W. L. Godshalk, University of Cincinnati
Ian Lancashire, New College, University of Toronto
Graham Parry, University of York, England
Paul G. Stanwood, University of British Columbia
Advisory Editors:
Richard W. Bailey, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor
Ronald Bond, University of Calgary
Luc Borot, Centre d'Etudes et de Recherches Elisabethaines,
Universite Paul-Valery, Montpellier, France
Douglas Bruster, University of Chicago
Thomas Corns, University of Wales, Bangor
Peter Donaldson, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
A. S. G. Edwards, University of Victoria
Jane Finnan, University of Toronto
Antonia Forster, University of Akron
John K. Hale, University of Otago, New Zealand
Robert S. Knapp, Reed College
F. J. Levy, University of Washington
Lawrence Manley, Yale University
John Manning, Queen's University of Belfast
Stephen Naoyuki Matsuba, York University, Canada
Mark Morton, University of Winnipeg
Jim Nielson, University of British Columbia
Stephen Orgel, Stanford University
Milla Riggio, Trinity College, CT
Alan Rudrum, Simon Fraser University
Robert Wiznura, University of British Columbia
Editor:
Raymond G. Siemens, University of British Columbia
Review Editor:
Joanne Woolway, Oriel College, Oxford
Editorial Assistant:
Gretchen E. Minton, University of British Columbia
Electronic Editors:
Joseph Jones, University of British Columbia
Jeff D. Miller, University of British Columbia
David Thomson, University of British Columbia
SUBMISSIONS
EMLS invites contributions, primarily those of critical essays
on literary topics and of interdisciplinary studies which centre
on literature and literary culture in English during the
sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. Contributions, including
critical essays and studies, bibliographies, notices, letters to
the Editor, and other materials, may be submitted to the Editor
by electronic mail at EMLS@arts.ubc.ca or by regular mail at
Early Modern Literary Studies, Department of English, University
of British Columbia, #397 - 1873 East Mall, Vancouver, British
Columbia, Canada, V6T 1Z1; reviews and materials for review may
be sent to the Review Editor at Review_Editor_EMLS@arts.ubc.ca or
by regular mail at the same address, above. Brief hard-copy
correspondence may be sent by fax to (604) 822-6906.
Electronic mail submissions are accepted in ASCII format.
Regular mail submissions of material on-disk are accepted in
ASCII, Wordperfect, or Microsoft Word format; hard-copy
submissions must be accompanied by electronic copies, either on-
disk or via electronic mail, and will not be returned. All
submissions must follow the current Modern Language Association
Handbook, in addition to the following conventions used by EMLS
for ASCII text: *bolded text* is denoted by asterisks,
%italicized text% by percent signs, _underlined text_ with the
underscore, ^superscript^ is denoted with the caret and is used
for note numbers in the text, and notes themselves appear at the
end of the document. A document outlining the representation of
non-ASCII characters is available on demand.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION . . .
For more information, or to join our mailing list, send a
message to Ed_Asst_EMLS@arts.ubc.ca.
Raymond G. Siemens <emls@arts.ubc.ca>
Editor, Early Modern Literary Studies,
Department of English, University of British Columbia.