Egypt
Journal Proposal: The Past Discussed Quarterly
Ancient World Bloggers Group
Thanks to Chuck Jones for sending me a link to this item, which introduces not only a new journal, but also a slightly different concept in academic publishing, occupying new ground somewhere between academically-focused blogs and academic journals. The following is an extract from Chuck's post. The extract is longer than usual because I wanted to draw attention to it, but please see the above page for full details.
The Past Discussed Quarterly will be a journal published four times a year. There’s no intention to compete for the same market as any other journals, nor to replace weblogs. Instead the journal is a bridge between bloggers in the broadest sense and non-blogging academics. The journal will be available as a PDF for free under a CC licence and paper format at the minimum allowed cost via Lulu. The journal will reproduce articles and entries from weblogs, providing a citeable format for people uncomfortable with citing weblogs. Additionally it’s intended that an XHTML or TEI format will be archived, initially with Tom Elliott and hopefully later with ISAW. This will provide a permanent curated archive for webloggers’ work. Submission will be similar to a blog carnival, though the need for permissions to re-print entries adds a little more to the process of submitting.
Deadlines for Submissions will be the ends of February, May, August, November. The entries will be blog posts which are open for comments.* The journal will be compiled starting the second week of March, June, September and December with the intention of being complete by the end of that month.
To enter an article a blogger will email the editorial panel (method to be determined) and display a PDQ button somewhere on the blog entry linked to a page explaining what PDQ is. Use of this button will signify that that the blogger is allowing his or her entry to be in PDQ and released under a Creative Commons BY-NC-ND licence. It sounds like a cunning way to gain links to the site, but it also has another function. We’ll need a positive action by the author to show they’re willing to be included. Adding a button is easier than faxing a form to a central point. All entries will be reviewed by an editor and any changes emailed back to the author. Entries may be full-length academic works, though I’d recommend submitting to a more prestigious OA journal, news commentary, reviews, sample photographs of collections available under a Creative Commons licence, opinion or anything that would be of particular interest to an ancient world blogger.
There is already a good conversation taking place over on the Ancient World Bloggers page on this subject. Some of the technical terminology may be unfamiliar, but they technical standards mentioned are all designed to improve accessibility. If you are unfamiliar with the concept of a Blog Carnival have a look at the explanation on Wikipedia.
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Egypt