Arkansas Review

Arkansas Review: A Journal of Delta Studies is an interdisciplinary humanities journal that focuses on the seven states of the Mississippi River Delta.[1] Each issue of the journal contains fiction, nonfiction, poetic, and visual art works which offer different perspectives on the Delta region. The journal is assembled and published through the Department of English, Philosophy, and World Languages at Arkansas State University in Jonesboro, Arkansas under the direction of Marcus Tribbett.

Arkansas Review
DisciplineHumanities and Social Sciences
LanguageEnglish
Edited byMarcus Tribbett
Publication details
Former name(s)
Kansas Quarterly
Publisher
Arkansas State University (United States)
FrequencyTriannually (April, August, December)
Standard abbreviations
ISO 4Ark. Rev.
Links

History

Origins

The Arkansas Review was originally known as Kansas Quarterly (1965 until 1993). It was founded at Kansas State University and edited by W. R. Moses, Ben Nyberg and Harold Schneider.[2][3][4] After losing several key editorial members at Kansas State and running out of funding in 1995, the publication was moved to the Department of English and Philosophy at Arkansas State University under the editorial direction of Norman Lavers, a creative writing professor at Arkansas State.[4][5] The publication underwent a name change to Kansas Quarterly/Arkansas Review to reflect both its origin and its current status.[5]

The publication secured funding through the Delta Studies program at Arkansas State University and began dedicating a portion of the journal to literature, essays, and creative materials related to the Mississippi River Delta.[5] In 1997, Norman Lavers stepped away from the general editor position due to an overload of submitted materials. William Clements, a local folklorist, became the general editor of the publication, and he focused on reshaping the publication by including interdisciplinary humanities materials to reflect the new home of the journal, the Delta.[5] In early 1998 under the new vision for the journal, the Kansas Quarterly/Arkansas Review became the Arkansas Review: A Journal of Delta Studies and began including scholarship from multiple humanities fields (Archaeology, Art history, Geography, History, Political science, Sociology, etc.) in addition to creative scholarship included in previous editions of the journal.[4]

The Arkansas Review continues Clements' vision for the journal and publishes a new issue every April, August, and December.[1] Many issues have a variety of topics, but some special editions focus on a central theme such as particular writers in the Delta or regional events.[4]

gollark: You mean "some people you spoke to think that there might be collapse".
gollark: Relative standing, obviously*.
gollark: This is an implausibly specific graph.
gollark: What *is* this data from?
gollark: Robotics progress and increasingly good tracking stuff might actually make riots and stuff not work fairly soon.

References

  1. "Arkansas Review | Our Journal". Retrieved 2020-03-09.
  2. Greasley, Philip A. (2016). Dictionary of Midwestern Literature, Volume 2: Dimensions of the Midwestern Literary Imagination. Indiana University Press. p. 415. ISBN 0253021162.
  3. "Literary Magazines". Washburn.edu. Washburn University. Retrieved 16 January 2017.
  4. Hooper, Monica (2017-05-25). "Arkansas Review: A Journal of Delta Studies". Encyclopedia of Arkansas. Retrieved 2020-03-01.
  5. Collins, Janelle (2015). Defining the Delta: Multidisciplinary Perspectives on the Lower Mississippi River Delta. The University of Arkansas Press. ISBN 978-1557286871.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.