CURRENT CALL FOR ARTICLES

CALL FOR ARTICLES ON RADICALISM

JSR:  Journal for the Study of Radicalism—a print academic journal published by Michigan State University Press—announces a call for articles and reviews for our sixth year of issues.  We are interested in articles on radicalism in a wide range of contexts and areas, and encourage articles from humanities and social science perspectives. For our next issues, we are particularly interested in subjects that concern the themes of post-communism, and post-Marxism or neo-Marxism, as well as state-sponsored or institutionalized radicalism or terrorism.  We also are interested in articles on the European New Right, as well as various aspects of or claims to a North American New Right.  And we are always interested in articles on other topics that pertain to the academic study of radicalism. JSR accepts articles on global topics, and we are interested in publishing articles and reviews on a wide range of related subjects and themes.  While each issue of the journal will have a thematic focus, in each issue we also may publish some articles as well as book reviews not specifically dedicated to that particular theme.

Submissions should be 20-30 pages in length, in .doc format, and conform to Chicago Manual of Style endnotes.  Please include a one-paragraph abstract.  Images for possible use in an article should be 300 dpi.  Authors are responsible for requesting and receiving permission to reprint images for scholarly use.

Send queries or completed articles to the editors at jsr@msu.edu by February 1, 2012.  See http://www.msupress.msu.edu/journals/jsr or www.radicalismjournal.net for more information.

Background

JSR is devoted to serious, scholarly exploration of the forms, representations, meanings, and historical influences of radical social movements.  With sensitivity and openness to historical and cultural contexts of the term, we loosely define “radical,” as distinguished from “reformers,” to mean groups who seek revolutionary alternatives to hegemonic social and political institutions, and who use violent or non-violent means to bring about socio-political change.

JSR’s primary purpose is to serve as a venue for fine scholarship in this developing academic field.  We expect scholarly contributors to come from a wide range of perspectives and disciplines, and we especially welcome articles that reconceptualize definitions and theories of radicalism, feature underrepresented radical groups, and introduce new topics and methods of study. We seek articles that make a clear larger point, and that offer a real contribution to the field.

Future Issues

Subsequent issues will be devoted to radical groups typically ignored in academic scholarship, and we remain interested in articles that challenge conventional notions of “left” and “right,” or received versions of the history of radicalism.  We also are interested in articles on state-sponsored forms of radicalism or terrorism, “grand experiments” gone terribly wrong, animal rights activism, and ecological activism.