Volume 34 (2010), 3 issues per year
Institutional subscriptions include free online access to the full text via www.ingentaconnect.com/content/maney
Aims
Dutch Crossing published since 1977, is an interdisciplinary peer-reviewed journal, devoted to all aspects of Low Countries Studies: Dutch language and literature, history and art history of the Low Countries, the social sciences and cultural studies, and Dutch as a foreign language. It also publishes conference papers, research reports, book reviews and occasionally, English translations of Dutch literary works. Coverage includes both the Netherlands and Belgium, as well as other places where Dutch historically had or continues to have an impact, including parts of the Americas, Southern Africa and South-East Asia. A special focus concerns relations between the Low Countries and the English-speaking world in all periods from the Middle Ages to the present day.
Dutch Crossing aims to encourage research and intellectual exchange, to disseminate scholarly work by younger as well as established researchers, and to enhance the profile of Low Countries Studies and of Dutch and Flemish culture in the English-speaking world. All articles are in English and blindly peer-reviewed by at least one referee.
Thematic issues have been produced on such topics as Anglo-Dutch relations in the 17th Century; Williamite Scotland and the Dutch Republic; contemporary Dutch women writers; Frisian culture; Landscape Painting; Literary Translation and Medieval Drama.
A cumulative index of the years 1977-2008 is available here.
Dutch Crossing receives honourable mention in Phoenix Award for Significant Editorial Achievement
Dutch Crossing, the journal of the Association for Low Countries Studies in Great Britain and Ireland, has achieved an honourable mention from the Council of Editors of Learned Journals (CELJ) in the Phoenix Award for Significant Editorial Achievement.
The award was established in 1987 to recognise the most improved journal, regardless of its state at the time the renovations began. Dutch Crossing moved to Maney Publishing in 2009 and underwent an eye-catching cover redesign, and also increases to 3 issues per year from 2010. The journal has been included in The British Humanities Index, Current Abstracts, Modern Language Association, Periodicals Index Online, and TOC Premier abstracting and indexing services for the first time in 2009.
Now publishing 3 issues per year!
Dutch Crossing will increase to 3 issues per year as of Volume 34 (2010).
Forthcoming in 2009...
Finding Rembrandt? Place, history, experience, and the individual, Susan Broomhall and Jennifer Spinks
An Urban Palimpsest: Migrancy, Architecture, and the making of an Anglo-Dutch Royal Exchange, Marjorie Rubright
The Brabant Revolution and the Western Question, Peter Illing
Heliogabalus in The Hague: Franco-Dutch relations during the embassy of D'Espesses (1624-1628), Maarten Hell
Abstracting and Indexing Services
Abstracting and indexing services citing Dutch Crossing include:
The British Humanities Index
Modern Language Association
Periodicals Index Online
Current Abstracts
TOC Premier
Advertising Rates
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Quarter Page |
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Publication Details
Volume 34 (2010), 3 issues per year
Deadlines for submitting adverts are therefore on the 15th of the month prior to publication.
If you wish to cancel your advert, this must be completed 45 days prior to publication date.
Contact
If you would like more information please email advertising@maney.co.uk
Or contact the marketing department on:
Tel: +44 (0)113 386 2800
Fax: +44 (0)113 386 8178
Individuals who wish to subscribe should apply to the Association for Low Countries Studies to receive the journal as part of an annual membership. For more information visit www.alcs.group.shef.ac.uk
INSTRUCTIONS FOR AUTHORS
Submission System
Dutch Crossing invites scholars from all disciplines to submit original articles via the journal's Online Tracking System. All articles are blindly peer-reviewed by at least one referee and modifications may be required. Final texts should be submitted in a standard file format (Microsoft Word; OpenOffice; RTF ...). Authors should provide an abstract of maximum 200 words with their article. Contributors are responsible for securing copyright clearance where applicable.
Illustrations
Illustrations may be supplied in digital form or as photographs. They should be of good quality, and clearly numbered and labelled.
Style
New paragraphs are not indented but preceded by a blank line. Book and journal titles appear in italics. Quotations of up to three lines are put between single quotation marks and appear in the main body of the text (followed by an English translation where applicable). Longer quotations (and their English translations where applicable) are indented, without quotation marks, and preceded and followed by a blank line. Quotations within quotations have double quotation marks. Omissions in quotations are indicated by [...]. Quotations in Dutch should be accompanied by English translations.
Notes and Referencing
Notes are entered as endnotes only. References may be given in the form of endnotes or by means of the author-date system. In captions, titles of paintings or other works of art appear in italics, followed (if applicable) by the date, medium and size of the work, the name and place of the museum or collection where they are held, and any other information the copyright holder may require.
Copy-Editing
Manuscripts should be in good English. Please note that the journal does not have the resources to engage in extensive copy-editing of submissions by non-native speakers of English.
For all other matters please contact the editors: uclduti@ucl.ac.uk
As part of the submission process, authors are required to check off their submission's compliance with all of these items, and submissions may be returned to authors that do not adhere to these guidelines.