Journal of
Southern Religion Editorial Policies:
The Journal of Southern
Religion is a fully peer-reviewed academic journal reflecting the best
traditions of objective and critical scholarship in the study of religion. As an
interdisciplinary venture, the editors invite submissions from historians,
religionists, anthropologists, sociologists, and other interested scholars. The
journal welcomes submissions on all aspects of Southern Religion but is
especially interested in publishing manuscripts that address the following
topics: 1) Regionalism in Southern Religion, e.g., Appalachia, the Gulf Coast,
South Florida and the Caribbean; 2) religious aspects of Southern culture, e.g.,
Religion and cuisine, music, and Southern literature; 3) Southern civil
religion; 4) local and folk religions, including ethnographic studies of
congregations and parishes; 5) ethnicity including immigration and slave
religions; 6) religion and race, class, disability, and gender issues in the
South. Individuals desiring to submit their research to JSR should read the submissions
policy.
Copyright: All material appearing in JSR is
copyrighted and all rights are reserved. Individuals may download and print
materials appearing in JSR for their own private educational use; otherwise,
articles, essays, images, and all other materials located at the JSR web site
cannot be duplicated or reproduced by any means (electronic or print) without
prior written authorization from the editors and the Association for the Study
of Southern Religion.
Citation: As with print media, any use of
JSR materials for scholarly or other purposes should be properly documented. The
following format should be used:
[Footnote or endnote] Sam Hill,
"Fundamentalism in Recent Southern Culture: Has it Done What the Civil Rights
Movement Couldn't Do?" Journal of Southern Religion 1 (1998).
[Bibliographic citation] Hill, Sam.
"Fundamentalism in Recent Southern Culture: Has it Done What the Civil Rights
Movement Couldn't Do?" Journal of Southern Religion 1 (1998).
Minimally, all references should contain the author's name, title, and the name
of the journal with volume and year citations. Use of the URL (i.e., the journal's
web site address, located inside the angle brackets) is optional, but, if included,
should retain the brackets. If cited in an online publication, the appropriate
URL for that site may be linked for instant reference. Contact the Managing
Editor for further information. All articles, essays, reviews, etc. that appear
in a given calendar year constitute a single journal volume.
