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Notice to Contributors The Editors invite submission of article-length manuscripts (not exceeding 35 pages in length), famous quotations relating to women's history (sexist or simply antiquated), and reports suitable for publishing in the International Trends in Women's History and Feminism section. Please send four copies to: Editors, THE JOURNAL OF WOMEN'S HISTORY, c/o History Department, BaUantine HaU 742, Indiana University, Bloomington , IN 47405. Please indude a stamped self-addressed postcard acknowledging receipt of your manuscript. We regret that we are unable to return manuscripts. Those manuscripts accepted for pubUcation wül require one additional hard copy and computer file on disk. We prefer 51A" 360K or 31Zi" 720K MS-DOS disks (IBM-compatible). We also accept Macintosh disks. Style Hard copy printouts of files should be double-spaced throughout, with footnotes appearing at the end. The author's name and address should appear on a separate page in order to facUitate blind review. Reports on work in progress and short annotated documents or interviews are also wdcome, in addition to more traditional scholarly artides. WhUe author's preferences wfll be considered, it is the Editors' poUcy to refer to women by their last names and to use African-Americans to designate U.S. dtizens of African descent. Gender-specific terms should not be used to refer to mixed groups (e.g., using "mankind" to refer to aU people) or to personify sudi groups as male (e.g., "the historian's perception of his role..."). Endnotes should also be double-spaced and foUow the short form of the University of Chicago Manual of Style. Here are some examples: 1 Jacqueline Jones, " 7My Mother Was Much of a Woman': Black Women, Work, and Famüy under Slavery," Feminist Studies 8 (Summer 1982): 235-70. [article in journal with no issue number must have season before date] 2 Evelyn Blackwood, "SexuaUty and Gender in Certain Native American Tribes," Signs 10, no. 1 (1984): 27. [artide in journal with issue number does not require a season before datej 3 Jand Bard, Women of the Reformation, rev. ed. (New York: Basic Books, 1963). [latest edition] 4 Ann D. Gordon and Mari Jo Buhle, "Sex and Class in Colonial and Nineteenth-Century America," in Liberating Women's History: 1992 Notice to Contributors 195 Theoretical and Critical Essays, ed. Berenice A. CarroU (Urbana: University of Illinois Press, 1976), 278-300. [article in a coUection] 5 Mary P. Ryan, Women in PubUc: Between Banners and BaUots, 1825-1880 (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1990), 122-131. [regular book dtationj 6 Ann J. Lane, ed. Mary Ritter Beard: A Sourcebook (Boston: Northeastern University Press, 1988; reprint of original 1977 Schocken edition), 1-8. [reprint edition] Second and later references need only rder to the author, short title of the work, and page numbers. Do not use op. cit. One should use Ibid, to refer to the same work as that cited immediately above. ...

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