The Canadian Journal of Irish Studies is the official scholarly publication of the Canadian Association for Irish Studies.
Founded in 1974, it has been edited at the University of British Columbia, the University of Saskatchewan, and Memorial University.
The Canadian Journal of Irish Studies aims to publish articles, reviews, viewpoints and creative expression which promote an understanding and appreciation of Irish history and culture in their broadest terms. It has a special focus on aspects of the Irish experience in Canada and in other countries of the Irish diaspora. It reflects a variety of critical and methodological perspectives and welcomes in particular multi- and inter-disciplinary approaches.
All articles are submitted to two referees before publication. Articles should be original and represent a new contribution to scholarship in Irish and Canadian Irish Studies. Submissions are encouraged from CAIS members and non-members alike.
Editorial contact: see
CJIS homepage.
Estudios Irlandeses, the scholarly electronic journal of AEDEI (Spanish Association for Irish Studies) invites authors to submit contributions – in either English or Spanish – that engage in a critical and original way with aspects of Irish literature, history, arts and the media, for its Issue N 1, to be published in March 2006.
Guidelines for submissions, which should be sent via email by 31 December 2005, are available on the
journal website.
Etudes Irlandaises is a peer-reviewed journal publishing articles in English and French which explore all aspects of Irish literature, history, culture and arts from ancient times to the present.
Etude Irlandaises publishes twice a year on a wide range of interdisciplinary subjects including: poetry / fiction / drama / film / music / politics / economy / social studies, etc.
General issues published in Spring alternate with special issues in Autumn - recent topics include the Peace Process (1999) and the Irish Language (2001).
Etudes Irlandaises is aimed at scholars, postgraduate students, institutions specializing in Irish studies as well as people who have an informed interest in the subject. Each number has a comprehensive section devoted to recently published material on Ireland. Editorial contact:
etudirl@univ-lille3.fr.
History Ireland was first published in March 1993 - an initiative by professional historians north and south of the border. One of its main aims is to bring the latest historical research "out of the ivory tower" and make it accessible to the widest possible audience, by presenting it in a popular style. Distinguished historians have backed the project as patrons and by contributing articles.
Authors of distinction in the wider literary world, such as Seamus Heaney, Seamus Deane, Conor Cruise O'Brien and Mary Robinson have also had articles published.
The quality of the writing has ensured that History Ireland has grown from strength to strength and reaches a wide audience in Ireland, Britain, Europe, USA, Canada, Australia and many other countries throughout the world.
History Ireland has also organised a number of conferences including: a conference on historical connections between Ireland and Scotland, held in Belfast; another on the United Irishmen at Tailors Hall in Dublin, as well as co-hosting a regular bi-annual conference of Irish Studies at Cambridge University in Britain.
Submission guidelines are available from the editors:
editorial@historyireland.com.
Hypermedia Joyce Studies was founded in 1994 as a refereed journal of criticism and scholarship on the works of James Joyce.
HJS publishes all its articles electronically on the World Wide Web and its form of publication makes it different from and a complement to other outlets for Joyce scholarship. Hypermedia Joyce Studies welcomes works representing any critical approach to any of Joyce's works.
Articles that involve feminism, cultural studies, postcoloniality, popular culture, poststructuralism, media and technology, historicism, formalism, textual criticism, etc. etc. are welcome.
In order to make use of the Web's capacities for hypertext and multimedia, we are particularly interested in articles written for hypertext and those that incorporate visual or sound elements.
Articles of this kind could not be published in a print journal except in a drastically different form. We are also interested in short pieces which bring to light archival discoveries or offer concise readings of specific elements within Joyce's works.
Authors interested in submitting work to HJS are invited to send email the editors in order to make arrangements for the file format and medium of submission:
lazarus@ff.cuni.cz.
Building on the important work of several international journals, the Irish Journal of Feminist Studies aims to extend and encourage feminist debate and scholarship across a wide range of disciplines and current issues.
It aims to contribute to the future of Women's Studies in Ireland by establishing a forum for academics who have completed and wish to publish aspects of their work which adds to Irish and international feminist debates.
The journal includes articles that examine various subject areas and concerns from a feminist perspective and hopes to achieve a broader recognition of the specificity of the Irish context internationally.
Guidelines for submissions are available on the website.
Irish Political Studies (IPS) is the only refereed journal exclusively dedicated to the publication of high-quality academic articles on Irish politics.
It covers politics in the Republic of Ireland, in Northern Ireland, the politics of their bilateral relationship and the politics of their relationship with the United Kingdom, and the European Union.
IPS is the official journal of the Political Studies Association of Ireland, the professional body of political scientists in Ireland, North and South.
Founded in 1986 Irish Political Studies has served a crucial constituency of academics, students, journalists and political practitioners.
It is the fundamental resource for any serious study of contemporary Ireland and has also contributed significantly to a greater understanding of Irish political science, political history, and has helped to place Irish politics in a broader comparative perspective.
Irish Studies Review is an indispensable resource for all those engaged in Irish studies and related disciplines.
Founded in 1992, it has become an important forum for the scholarly development of knowledge, understanding and appreciation of Irish studies and culture throughout the world.
It serves a wide range of disciplinary communities, including history and archaeology; literary, cultural, gender and media studies; politics and economics; and music and the arts.
Each issue consists of:
- refereed articles
- reviews and review articles on all aspects of Irish studies
- topical debates and interviews
The journal aims to reflect the variety of perceptions current in the
field, to support traditional disciplinary scholarship, and to promote
multi- and inter-disciplinary approaches to the subject.
All articles and viewpoints are submitted to at least two referees before acceptance for publication.
Now five years old, Irish Theatre Magazine is a quarterly magazine devoted to the timely
and topical coverage of theatre in Ireland and Irish theatre around the world. Each issue contains features, reviews, commentary, columns, and news about productions, companies, individuals, venues, and festivals.
NEW! ONLINE NEWSLETTER
ITM online newsletter will be delivered straight into your inbox six times a year featuring an opening night review of a major new production, a round up of home and international theatre news, must-see production picks etc... Subscription is free.
If you would like to subscribe simply visit
our website.
Irish University Review
JSA is a valuable resource for current research on the work of James Joyce.
Each volume of the annual carries articles from leading Joyce scholars emphasizing the areas of historical, textual, and comparative criticism.
Now in its eleventh year, JSA includes a comprehensive bibliography of the previous year's Joyce-related publications.
Key features of Joyce Studies Annual include previously unpublished text and photographs from the Harry Ransom Center's extensive Joyce collection. For submission guidelines see the website.
For nearly forty years the James Joyce Quarterly has been the flagship journal of international Joyce studies.
In each issue, the JJQ brings together a wide of array of critical and theoretical work focusing on the life, work, and reception of James Joyce. We encourage submissions of all types, welcoming archival, historical, biographical, and critical research. For submission guidelines see the website.
Litteraria Pragensia is an international refereed academic journal focusing on literary and cultural theory, poetics, history of Western literatures and cultures and comparative literary and cultural studies.
It prefers recent and contemporary theoretical and methodological approaches, the study of cultural regions and of the international context of Czech literature and culture.
The most important publication format are special issues (so far, issues on the New Historicism, Utopias and the New World, Romanticism and cultural history, Swiss and Canadian literatures in French, Shakespeare and contemporary commercial culture, the theme of ruins in literature, the style in English poetry from the beginnings to the Renaissance, Deleuze´s theory of the 'literary machine', and Irish literature, have been published).
The journal also prints publishes review articles and reviews and documents (e.g., the correspondence between C. G. Jung and Mircea Eliade).
Articles, reviews and documents appear in English, French, Spanish, German, Italian and Portuguese. Editorial contact:
pilny@ff.cuni.cz.
NEW...
The Nordic Irish Studies journal is published by
The Centre for Irish Studies in Aarhus (CISA),
Dalarna University Centre for Irish Studies (DUCIS) and
The Nordic Irish Studies Network (NISN).
The aims of Nordic Irish Studies are to reflect the research activities of CISA, CISDU and NISN and to publish articles on Irish history, politics, society, culture and literature.
General editors:
Michael Böss and
Irene Gilsenan Nordin.
Free to paid-up members of The Irish Studies Network (membership fee 2003: 20 EUR). Membership of NISN includes two years membership of the European Federation of Associations and Centres of Irish Studies (EFACIS).
www.oscholars.com is a website that is home to a small family of journals
dealing with the literature and arts of the fin-de-siecle, with two journals
devoted to Oscar Wilde, (
THE OSCHOLARS and
rue des beaux arts), one to Shaw
(
Shavings) and one to George Moore
(
Moorings).
Alerts to the
arrival of new material posted on the site for any or all of these are sent
to those who request them at
oscholars@gmail.com.
The site also houses
The Sibyl, a journal devoted to Vernon Lee, whose name, although she had no
Irish links, will bring joy to all Cork readers.