> New from Routledge - The Sixties: A Journal of History, Politics, and
> Culture
>
> * * The first issue is now available & can be accessed FREE online
> at www.informaworld.com/thesixties
> click "Issue 1" to the left of the "free access" button to see the
> text in html or as pdfs (you may have to type in the address if using
> firefox. And let us know if you want a charter subscription flyer at
> a discount rate.)
>
> Across the globe, no era in the 20th century has been as celebrated,
> contested, and scrutinized as the 1960s. And as we are frequently
> reminded - in a parade of books, articles, films, television programs
> and exhibitions - the Sixties continue to illuminate our present era.
> Now, forty years after the many of the main events of 1960s, Routledge
> is delighted to announce the publication of a new, peer-reviewed
> journal devoted to grappling with the era's complicated legacy.
>
> Featuring cross-disciplinary and cutting-edge scholarship from
> academics and public intellectuals, The Sixties is the only academic
> journal devoted to this extraordinary era. In addition to research
> essays and book reviews, The Sixties publishes exhibition reviews,
> conversations, interviews and graphics.
>
> The Sixties is edited by Jeremy Varon (Drew University), Michael S.
> Foley (City University of New York) and John McMillian (Harvard
> University).
>
> Editorial Board: Beth Bailey, Winifred Breines, Marianne DeKoven,
> David Farber, Peniel Joseph, Andrew Huebner, Daniel Kane, Martin
> Klimke, Felicia Kornbluh, Ian Lekus, Fredrik Logevall, Lorena Oropeza,
> Jeremi Suri, Rhonda Williams, Patricia Zimmerman.
>
> The inaugural issue includes:
>
> * an editorial statement
> * essays on the Black Panthers in Israel; the Chicano land grant
> movement; and abstract art and 1968
> * reviews of "Across the Universe" and the Whitney Museum exhibit on
> psychedelia
> * a review essay of writings on Mexico in the Sixties
> * reviews of books on SNCC, May 68 in France, the Esalen Institute,
> SDS, the Welfare Rights movement, Henry Kissinger, Latin American
> literature and the Sixties, and more
> * an interview with Daniel Berrigan and Frida Berrigan
>
> For further information, please contact: [log in to unmask], [log in to unmask]
> , and [log in to unmask]
>
> The Sixties will be published twice a year in print and online (Print
> ISSN: 1754-1328; Online ISSN: 1754-1336). Subsequent issue are
> available by subscription. Subscription issue is available on the
> website www.informaworld.com/thesixties.
>
>
>
> The Sixties is Accepting Submissions for Upcoming Issues
>
> The journal takes "the long sixties" (roughly 1954-1975) as its broad
> focus, and includes transnational and comparative analyses. Editors
> welcome submissions in the following areas:
>
> * Social movements and political protest
> * Foreign and domestic policy
> * Institutions and international relations
> * Decolonization and North-South conflicts
> * Women's history, gender history and the history of sexuality
> * The experiences of subaltern and sub-national groups
> * Intellectual history
> * Print culture and electronic media
> * Music, literature, film, theater, architecture and the visual arts
> * Industry, business and advertising
> * Science, technology and ecology
> * Crime and punishment
>
> Articles should be no more than 8,000 words (excluding notes) and free
> of specialized jargon, with Chicago Humanities referencing and limited
> endnotes. Please send submissions electronically to each of the
> following addresses: [log in to unmask], [log in to unmask]
> , and [log in to unmask]
>
> Ideas for book reviews should be sent to John McMillian ([log in to unmask]
---------------------------------------------------------
Professor Gerrit-Jan Berendse
Head of Department
Department of German
Cardiff School of European Studies
Cardiff University
65-68 Park Place
Cardiff CF10 3AS
United Kingdom
Tel. ++44-29-20874534
Fax ++44-29-20874946
www.cardiff.ac.uk/euros/contactsandpeople/profiles/berendsegj.html
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