Volume 36 (2012), 3 issues per year
Institutional subscribers receive online access 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.
SPECIAL ISSUE for 2012:
‘Crossing Boundaries and Transforming Identities: Papers from the Fifteenth Biennial Interdisciplinary Conference on Netherlandic Studies'. Read the table of contents.
Follow the links below to view the abstracts for these articles and download two articles FREE:
Batik Belanda: Transformed Identities Cross Boundaries in the Visual Arts (Or: Eliza van Zuylen and Creativity at the Margins), Julie Berger Hochstrasser
Military Painting in Flux. Flemish, French, Dutch, and British Pictures Glorifying Kings, Haks Donald FREE
Vermeer's Robe: Costume, Commerce, and Fantasy in the Early Modern Netherlands, Martha Hollander FREE
Being Nassau: Nassau Family Histories and Dutch National Identity from 1541 to 1616, Liesbeth Geevers
Collaborators and Parvenus? Berlaymont and Noircarmes, Loyal Noblemen in the Dutch Revolt, Violet Soen
Investment, Advertisement, and Sponsorship: Business in Dutch Football 1910-1920, Nicholas Piercey
'This Is Not Happening To Me': Places of Holocaust and the Problem of Traumatic Representation,
Kim Van Kaam
One Nation, One Language? The Case of Belgium, Ulrike Vogl, Matthias Hüning
How (not) to Get Published: The Plantin Press in the Early 1590s, Jan Machielsen
Transcending Tradition: Rembrandt's Death of the Virgin 1639: A Re-Vision, Mary Christine Barker
Abstracting and Indexing Services
Abstracting and indexing services citing Dutch Crossing include:
Arts and Humanities Citation Index of ISI
Bibliography of the History of Art
British Humanities Index
Current Abstracts
Current Contents of ISI
International Bibliography of Art
ISI
Linguistics and Language Behaviour Abstracts
Modern Language Association Bibliography
Periodicals Index Online
Social Sciences Citation Index of ISI
TOC Premier
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Publication Details
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
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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
Dutch Crossing welcomes original papers that match the aims and scope of the Journal on the understanding that the paper has not previously been published, and is not being concurrently submitted for publication elsewhere. All papers will be sent to independent referees. It is a condition of publication that on acceptance of the paper by the Journal Editors that copyright must be assigned to W. S. Maney & Son Ltd.
Submission
Dutch Crossing invites scholars from all disciplines to submit original articles via the journal's Online Tracking System. For all other matters please contact the Editors (editors@dutchcrossing.org). Authors wishing to correspond directly with the Editors are also welcome to do so. Articles should be submitted in standard file format (e.g. Microsoft Word).
In preparing the electronic version, there is no need to format articles. Use a single (not double) space after the full point at the end of sentences. Please use plain style and avoid elaborate layout or typography, but include italics or bold type when necessary, and make sure that headings and subheadings are clearly visible as such. Words should not be hyphenated at the end of a line. Consistency in spacing, punctuation, and spelling will be of help. References and captions should be placed at the end of the file. Articles must be accompanied by a short abstract of a maximum of 200 words summarizing the contents of their paper. Articles should also be accompanied by up to 6 key words to aid search ability of the article online. A short academic biography should be included with a maximum of 50 words. Any acknowledgements should be placed at the end of the article, before any Notes. The title of the paper and author(s’) name(s) should appear at the beginning of the paper. The full contact details (postal address, email address, telephone and fax numbers) for the corresponding author should be included. All pages should be numbered.
For information about style and formatting of articles and file type requirements please click here.
Authors, or their funding agency, may sponsor an article for open access publication. For information on article charges and how to exercise this option visit: www.maney.co.uk/moreopenchoice. These notes are intended only to provide an overview. Address enquiries to the Journal editor.
Supplementary material
Additional material (e.g. datasets, models, animations or videos) that enhances the content and impact of articles. Supplementary material is intended to support arguments advanced in the article; it must not refer to other work nor contain discussion or conclusions that go beyond the content of the article. The inclusion of supplementary material is at the discretion of the Editor whose decision on its relevance and appropriateness is final. Supplementary material should be referred to in the main text, but must be self-contained and supplied as separate files. Refer to each item of supplementary material in parentheses within the text: (Supplementary Material 1), (Supplementary Material 2) and so forth. See the detailed instructions here on submission and presentation of supplementary material.
Styling
British spelling (as given in the Oxford English Dictionary) is used (e.g. ize not ise).
Quotations
Long quotations (more than about forty words of prose, or more than two complete lines of verse) should begin on a new line but with no extra line space above or below, no quotation marks and (for prose) no indenting. Short quotations (prose and verse) should be placed within single inverted commas and run on with the body of the text.
References
Endnotes should be used for referencing and should be kept to the strict minimum necessary for documentation. They should contain only minimal extra expository material. Endnote numbers, which should always use arabic numerals, should be given sequentially in the text, immediately following the most convenient punctuation mark. All references should conform to Maney Style available in downloadable form here.
Copyright and Ethics
It is the responsibility of the author to ensure that they comply with Maney’s copyright and ethics (including plagiarism) policies. Strong policies in these areas protect the rights of authors, editors, reviewers and publishers alike ensuring the reputation of the publication and copyright holders.
Maney’s policies can be found by reading the information available here, along with best practice guidelines for authors, journal editors and reviewers.
Proofs, Illustrations, Permissions and Eprints
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