Contemporary Women's Writing

Contemporary Women's Writing is a triannual academic journal, affiliated to the Contemporary Women's Writing Association,[1] which critically assesses writing by women authors who have published from approximately 1970 to the present.[2]

Contemporary Women's Writing
DisciplineContemporary women's writing
LanguageEnglish
Edited bySuzanne Keen, Emma Parker
Publication details
History2007-present
Publisher
Oxford University Press (United Kingdom)
FrequencyTriannually
Standard abbreviations
ISO 4Contemp. Women's Writ.
Indexing
ISSN1754-1476 (print)
1754-1484 (web)
LCCN2008210106
OCLC no.214332701
Links

The journal is a published by Oxford University Press and its editors-in-chief are Suzanne Keen (Washington and Lee University) and Emma Parker (University of Leicester).[2]

History

The journal was established in 2007, with Mary Eagleton (Leeds Metropolitan University) and Susan Stanford Friedman (University of Wisconsin-Madison) as founding editors.[3]

Awards

In 2009, the journal won The Council of Editors of Learned Journals award for best new journal at the Modern Language Association's conference in Philadelphia.[4]

Abstracting and indexing

gollark: I'm working on the "unicode abuse" one.
gollark: apiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobeeapiobee
gollark: Hold on.
gollark: Hmm, it SHOULD detect that.
gollark: What?

References

  1. "Journal". Contemporary Women's Writing Association. Retrieved 10 March 2015.
  2. "About the journal". Contemporary Women's Writing. Oxford University Press. Retrieved 10 March 2015.
  3. Eagleton, Mary; Stanford Friedman, Susan (December 2007). "Editors' introduction: Editorial statement". Contemporary Women's Writing. Oxford University Press. 1 (1–2): 1–3. doi:10.1093/cww/vpm021.
  4. "Prestigious prize for Contemporary Women's Writing". Contemporary Women's Writing Association. 30 December 2010. Retrieved 10 March 2015.
  5. "Content overview". Scopus. Elsevier. Retrieved 2015-03-12.
  6. "Master Journal List". Intellectual Property & Science. Thomson Reuters. Retrieved 2015-03-12.


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.