Notes for Contributors
The Editors welcome submissions that explore issues related to the areas described in the Photography and Culture journal description document. Indeed, any relevant aspect of Photography and Culture will be considered as long as both those elements form the core of the submission. It is requested that plain language be aspired to, with the use of jargon or specialized terminology kept to the absolute minimum. (Where specialized terms are unavoidable, please supply a glossary.) All submissions considered for publication will be subject to peer review.
Submissions aimed at being major articles should be approximately 3,000–10,000 words in length and must include a brief (two- or three-sentence) biography of the author(s), an abstract (up to about 200 words) and up to five keywords. Shorter papers (“Notes”) should range between 500 and 2,500 words in length. Interviews should not exceed 15 pages (about 4,000 words) and do not require an author biography. Exhibition and book reviews are normally 500–2,000 words in length.
Electronic submissions (preferred, certainly in the first instance) should be sent to photographyandculture@
bloomsbury.com. Microsoft Word is the preferred word-processing program, where possible. Scanned illustrations will suffice, though originals may possibly be requested in certain circumstances if the submission is successful. (Originals will be returned.) Please scan to letter or A4 size at 300 dpi for photographs/halftone, or 600 dpi for maps or illustrations containing text. Illustrations embedded in Word documents cannot be used. Similarly, graphics downloaded from webpages are not of sufficient quality for print reproduction.
A disk as well as a hardcopy of any finally accepted contributions may occasionally be requested. (Please mark clearly on the disk what word-processing program has been used. Berg accepts most programs with the exception of Clarisworks.) Manuscripts or disks should be submitted to the current Photography and Culture postal address: Photography and Culture, PO Box 11, Moreton-in-Marsh, GL56 0ZF, UK.
Submissions will be acknowledged by the managing editors, and those accepted for further consideration will be entered into the review process. Electronic manuscripts and scanned illustrations will not be returned. Submission to the journal will be taken to imply that the article is not being considered elsewhere for publication, and that if accepted for publication it will not be published elsewhere, in the same form, in any language, without the consent of the editors and publisher. It is a condition of acceptance by the editors of a submission for publication that the publishers, Berg, automatically acquire the copyright of the published article throughout the world. Photography and Culture does not pay authors for their submissions nor does it provide retyping, drawing, or mounting of illustrations.
Style
The journal’s text will use US spelling and mechanicals. The Chicago Manual of Style [15th Edition] is our style guideline, and Webster’s Dictionary is our arbiter of spelling. While it would be preferred if contributors used US English, submissions in British English will be acceptable (though such submissions will be transliterated into US spelling and mechanicals). We encourage the use of major subheadings and, where appropriate, second-level subheadings. Manuscripts (whether electronic or hardcopy) submitted for consideration as articles must contain: a title page with the full title of the article, the author name(s), address and affiliation where relevant (do not place the author name(s) on any other page of the manuscript), a two- or three-sentence biography for each author, and a 200-word abstract. Up to five keywords are requested to aid in any future library searches. Please present the keywords after the abstract.
Electronic manuscripts can be either single- or double-spaced. If hardcopy manuscripts are involved, then they must be typed double-spaced (including quotations, notes, and references cited), one side only, with at least one-inch margins on standard paper using a typeface no smaller than 12-point. Authors should retain a copy for their records.
It would be preferred that submissions be presented with paragraph breaks involving a line space (double line space if presenting a double-spaced text, of course) between paragraphs and without first-line indentation, as in this set of guidelines.
Notes and References
References to notes are to be by means of consecutive numbers inserted in-text throughout the paper and are to be written up at the end of the text. (Do not use any footnoting or end-noting programs that your software may offer as this text becomes irretrievably lost at the typesetting stage.)
For references, the “Harvard system” is to be used in-text, thus:
Centuries ago in Europe, country people were terrified of the walking dead, of “revenants” (Smith 1989). They developed all kinds of protective procedures (Jones 1957; Morris 1972, 1984), and though these may seem bizarre to us now they were deemed absolutely necessary at the time.
The cited references should be presented at the end of the paper, after any notes, in this manner:
References
Dewdney, S., 1962. Indian Rock Paintings of the Great Lakes. Toronto: University of Toronto Press.
Dowson, T., 1992. Rock Engravings of Southern Africa. Johannesburg: Witwatersrand University Press.
Fagg, B., 1957. “Rock Gongs and Slides.” Man 57: 30–2.
Goldhahn, J., 2002. “Roaring Rocks: An Audio-Visual Perspective on Hunter-Gatherer Engravings in Northern Sweden and Scandinavia.” Norwegian Archaeological Review 35(1): 29–61.
Hedges, K., 1990. “Petroglyphs in Menifee Valley.” Rock Art Papers 7: 75–82.
Lawson, G., Scarre, C., Cross, I. and Hills, C., 1998. “Mounds, Megaliths, Music and Mind: Some Thoughts on the Acoustical Properties and Purposes of Archaeological Spaces.” Archaeological Review from Cambridge 15(1): 11–34.
Palmer, D. and Pettitt, P., 2001. “In Search of our Musical Roots.” Focus 105: 80–4.
Rajnovich, G., 1994. Reading Rock Art: Interpreting the Indian Rock Paintings of the Canadian Shield. Toronto: Natural Heritage/Natural History Inc.
Reznikoff, I., 1995. “On the Sound Dimension of Prehistoric Painted Caves and Rocks,” in E. Taratsi (ed.), Musical Signification. Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter.
Rowland, I. and Howe, T.N. (eds.), 1999. Vitruvius: Ten Books on Architecture. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.