Dialectology Magazine and Popular Traditions, created in 1944, is the national publication, specializing in ethnography, and oldest continuously existing in Spain. Dedicated to socio-cultural anthropology, extended this research in its broadest sense, including the tongue, and specifically its manifestations dialect. It is open to the collaboration of the international community of researchers interested in this area of ??knowledge. Publishes an annual volume of six hundred pages, divided into two semiannual issues (July and December).Its format conforms to international standards of UNESCO for editing scientific publications and stripped appears in major academic databases and professional international.
Fundada en 1914 por Ramón Menéndez Pidal, la Revista de Filología Española se publica en volúmenes semestrales que forman cada año un tomo de unas 450 páginas. A lo largo de su trayectoria, la RFE, que acoge trabajos de filología española, se ha ido adaptando a los cambios que ha experimentado la Filología misma. Proporciona la información bibliográfica relacionada con sus contenidos que aparece en las revistas recibidas en la Biblioteca de Filología (CSIC).El Consejo de Redacción, de acuerdo con los informes confidenciales de evaluadores externos, decide sobre la publicación de los artículos recibidos, que deberán ser siempre originales inéditos. La lengua de la RFE es el español. Se admitirán artículos en otras lenguas románicas, con la aprobación del Consejo de Redacción.
Rhetoric Society Quarterly, the official journal of the Rhetoric Society of America, features original articles on all areas of rhetorical studies including theory, history, criticism, and pedagogy. The journal addresses an interdisciplinary audience of scholars and students of rhetorics who work in communication studies, English studies, philosophy, politics and other allied fields.Submissions:Rhetoric Society Quarterly is published five times a year. Article-length manuscripts on all areas of rhetorical studies including theory, history, criticism, and pedagogy are invited. Contributions should exhibit high standards for professional scolarship, and should offer new knowledge or advance the discussion on significant issues in the field of rhetoric in ways that address the work and common interests of rhetoricians who reside in a variety of disciplines.Special AnnouncementKneupper Award for 2010Rhetoric Society Quarterly is pleased to announce that the Kneupper Award for the best article in the 2010 volume of the journal is awarded to: Susan Romano, 8220;'Grand Convergence' in the Mexican Colonial Mundane: The Matter of Introductories8221; in 40:1, pages 71-93. Three members of the Editorial Board served as the award committee: David Fleming, Jean Goodwin, and Patricia Roberts-Miller (chair). Members of the committee found this essay to be 8220;extraordinary,8221; 8220;potentially transformative,8221; and 8220;startling,8221; noting that it 8220;identifies a question central to rhetorical studies8221; and serves as 8220;a model of what great rhetorical scholarship can be8212;specific and abstract, drawing canonical theorists together with noncanonical texts, and pushing the field in a genuinely new direction.8221; This award is given each year in memory of Charles Kneupper, 19498211;1989, who initiated and organized the earliest biennial RSA conferences at the University of Texas at Arlington, where he taught. Charles was an active member of RSA and mentor to many graduate students in rhetoric.This announcement will also appear in the spring issue of RSQ (41:2).Carolyn R. MillerRSQ Editor Peer Review Policy: All articles in this journal have undergone editorial screening and anonymous peer review.Publication office: Taylor & Francis, Inc., 325 Chestnut Street, Suite 800, Philadelphia, PA 19106.
Published for The International Society for the History of Rhetoric, Rhetorica includes articles, book reviews and bibliographies that examine the theory and practice of rhetoric. Published quarterly. International in scope, Rhetorica publishes articles in all periods, in English, French, German, Italian, and Spanish, and on any subject relevant to the history of rhetoric—from studies of rhetorical theory to interdisciplinary explorations of the relationship of rhetoric to poetics, philosophy, politics, religion, and law. The International Society for the History of Rhetoric Founded in 1977, The International Society for the History of Rhetoric includes members from thirty countries, and holds biennial congresses in Europe and North America. The purpose of the Society is to promote study of the theory and practice of rhetoric in all periods and languages. The Society fosters inquiry into the relationship of rhetoric to poetics, literary theory and criticism, philosophy, politics, religion, law, and other aspects of the cultural context. Membership in the Society is open to all individuals who subscribe to its aims. Membership includes receiving the Society's journal, Rhetorica, as well as its semi-annual, Rhetoric Newsletter. .