Soundings
a journal of politics and culture
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Guidelines for Contributors
Prospective writers are encouraged to contact the editor
to discuss their ideas and to make reference to the style guidelines below.
When each article is submitted it should have with it:
1. A suitable blurb - i.e. about 60 words to introduce the article.
This will appear on the first page of the article, after the title.
2. A couple of sentences to describe the author, for inclusion on
the notes on contributors page. These will normally consist of the author's
job and a recent publication, if applicable. If not applicable, something
else which indicates their suitability as an author.
3. Author's name and address.
Submissions:
Email sally@lwbooks.co.uk with initial
proposal. Please note: we will not open attachments from unknown correspondents.
Please send an initial proposal without attachment. Once your proposal is
agreed, send your article as an rtf file.
Submissions of a paper to Soundings will be
taken to imply that it presents original, unpublished work not under consideration
for publication elsewhere. By submitting a manuscript the author agrees
that he or she is granting the Publisher for a fixed term the exclusive
right to reproduce and distribute the paper including reprints, photographic
reproductions, microfilm or any other reproduction of a similar nature,
and translations. He or she will not be required to assign the copyright.
Style:
Although Soundings maintains very rigorous standards, our aim is for
the journal to be accessible to a readership outside academia as well as
within. We therefore ask authors not to write in a traditional academic
style, and to avoid jargon. We also ask for footnotes to be kept to an absolute
minimum, and to be used, for referencing sources rather than simply for
indicating lots of other articles in the same field.
Photography:
Please send images as jpg files 300dpi
References and Notes:
For style, please see below. In general we aim to have very few footnotes
in Soundings. Only use footnotes when absolutely essential. Each
reference should follow this basic format: name, book, publisher
date.
Note the commas. Book in italics, no brackets around publisher.
p6, not p.6 or p. 6
pp67-69 not pp. 67-69 or pp.67-69
op cit not op. cit.
ibid not ibid.
Proofs:
Proofs will only be sent to authors on specific request, arranged in
advance.
Complimentary Copies and Offprints:
Offprints are not supplied, but every author will naturally receive a
free copy of the issue to which he or she has contributed, and may purchase
further copies (and back numbers) on trade terms.
Style Guide
- Follow style of Hart's Rules and the
Oxford Dictionary for Writers and Editors. Generally consistency
is all-important.
- Extracts (quotations of 60 words or more):
indent without quotation marks, with a line space above and below, giving
reference by superscript numeral and endnote.
- Italics: for names of ships, play titles,
newspapers (only The Times, The Guardian and The
Economist have 'The' as part of title), paintings, film titles,
books, magazines, journals, TV programme names. Poem, essay and short
story titles in roman and single quotes.
- Quotations (less than 60 words): single
quote marks, but double for quotation within quotation. Square brackets
for author/editor's insertion of words not in the original, eg 'in many
respects [hers is an] exemplary biography.'
- S/Z: please use s spellings (eg organise,
apologise, etc)
- Dashes: spaced 'en' rules - to be typed
thus.
- Ellipses: three dots with spaces on
either side thus ... even if a sentence ends of starts with one.
- Paragraphs: first paragraph of chapter/section
is full out, following paragraphs are closed up and indented.
- Hyphens: maintain consistency (keep
list if in doubt): compound nouns, eg film-maker, make-up (but not established
compounds, eg soundtrack, comeback, breakdown, etc); adjectival phrases,
eg middle-class (but not the noun, eg 'the working class'); but normally
not between adverb and adjective, eg well illustrated, widely known);
clashing vowels, eg co-operate, re-introduce (but not rewrite, rethink,
etc).
- Foreign words/phrases: check with Oxford
Dictionary for Writers and Editors for accents and italicisation. Roman
only for words/phrases in common usage, eg rendezvous, role, regime (note:
no accents).
- Contractions: omit full point of contractions
(which end in last letter of word), e.g.: Dr, Mr, Mrs, St, edn, eds, Ltd;
and after metric unites (preferred to Imperial measures, but please be
consistent), e.g.: cm, m, km, kg, etc.
- Abbreviations: end with full points
(since truncated), e.g.: p.m., ed., vol., no., etc. And for initials of
people, e.g.: R. A. Butler, Edward W. Said, etc. No full points with initials
for organisations etc, e.g.: RAC, BBC, SWP, HMSO, USA, etc.
- Dates: use 1950s not fifties, '50s or
1950's. Use 1984, not '84; and use 1914-18, unless 1899-1902. For complete
dates, give thus: 25 June 1992 (not 25th June 1992, or June 25, 1992).
Spell out nineteenth century, not 19th century (and note hyphenation of
adjectival usage, e.g.: a nineteenth-century tradition).
- Numbers: spell out to 100 (e.g.: eighty-nine),
then use numerals (e.g.: 253). The exceptions are measurements (see below)
and millions/billions (e.g.: 7.8 million). Thousands: use comma only in
five- or six-figure numbers, ie. 4000 but 45,000.
- Measurements: use figures (numerals),
e.g.: 8 km, 15 hectares, etc. Film/camera lens measurements thus, 16mm,
35mm (closed up as shown).
- Percentages: use figures, and spell
out per cent (two words) (e.g.: 20 per cent).
- Notes and References: when you really
do need to give a reference, use a superscript number in the text, and
list footnotes at the end in the following way: author's (or editor's)
surname (with first name preferably, or initial[s]), title (italicized)
and subtitle, publisher, place and date, e.g.: Stuart Hall and Martin
Jacques (eds), The Politics of Thatcherism, Lawrence and
Wishart, London 1983. Only add page references where appropriate at end.
Use ibid. and op. cit., according to Hart's
Rules, e.g.: Hall and Jacques, lc. cit., pp49-53.
- Capitalisation: check with Oxford
Dictionary for Writers and Editors for capitalisation of proper
names etc. Do not capitalise socialism, communism, fascism, the left,
the right, etc. For chapter/section headings use upper case for initial
letter for all words of three letters and more, excluding conjunctions/articles
(after initial capital), e.g.: The End of Fordism and Organised Capitalism.
Poetry
Poems should be sent to:
Carole Satyamurti, Poetry Editor
Soundings
c/o Lawrence and Wishart
99a Wallis Road
London E9 5LN
Book Reviews
Book reviews (and books for review) should be sent to the following
address:
Becky Hall and Christine Clegg, Reviews Editors
Soundings
c/o Lawrence and Wishart
99a Wallis Road
London E9 5LN
Reviewers should note the following variations from the main
style guidelines:
- Manuscripts:: The maximum length is
usually 2000 words.
- Reference and Notes: Footnotes should
be kept to an absolute minimum. Page references to the book(s) reviewed
should be incorporated in the text (eg: 'as the author herself claims
(p23)'). References to other works requiring footnotes should be avoided
where possible.
- Book Title: Publication details of books
under review should include the number of pages and the price of paper
and cloth editions where appropriate, eg.: Robert Markley (ed.), Virtual
Realities and their Discontents, Johns Hopkins Press, Baltimore
1996, 171pp; £12.50 paperback, £32 cloth.