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Hypatia 18.3 (2003) 250-252



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Guidelines for Contributors/Calls for Papers


For our most current guidelines, please see our Web site, www.csupomona.edu/~hypatia.

Hypatia solicits papers on all topics in feminist philosophy. Please send five copies and an electronic copy of your paper on disk to:

Editors, Hypatia Email: hypatia@newton.la.psu.edu

Department of Philosophy Voice: (814) 865-1918

Pennsylvania State University Fax: (814) 865-0119

240 Sparks Building TTY Direct (TTY to TTY): (814) 865-7357

University Park, PA 16802-5201 TTY Relay (Voice to TTY): 1 800 654-5988

If you are an IBM user, please submit your electronic version on IBM-compatible disk, with your files saved in Microsoft Word format. If you are a Macintosh user, please submit your paper, saved in Microsoft Word format, via e-mail attachment. Be sure to submit both an electronic copy and hard copy.

Articles may vary in length, though long articles will be published only as space permits. In addition to substantial research papers, we invite submissions for our Comment/Reply, Archive, and Review Essay sections, as well as proposals for our Symposia and Special Features sections. We also invite proposals for Special Issues. Book reviews are normally by invitation.

Manuscripts submitted to Hypatia should not be under simultaneous consideration by any other journal, nor should they have been published elsewhere. The review process takes an average of six months. Though the primary aim of our review process is to select and refine papers for publication, we aim to have the review process nurture and support scholarship in the area of feminist philosophy.

Manuscript Preparation:

1. Manuscripts should be typed, double-spaced with 1.25 inch margins (including quotations and excerpts, notes, and references), and the right margin should not be justified.

2. The author should not be identified except on the title page in order to facilitate our anonymous review process. [End Page 250]

3. Papers should include a 75-word (or less) abstract.

4. Use 8 × 11-inch white paper. Dot-matrix print is acceptable only if the characters are clear and legible. Send five clean copies of the manuscript.

5. Use American spellings and punctuation, except when directly quoting a source that has followed British style. Space once after periods and colons. All punctuation, except colons and semicolons, should be placed inside quotation marks. Single quotation marks are used only for quotes within quotes. Quoted material of 10 lines or more in length should be set off from the text without quotation marks as double-indented extracts.

6. Notes should appear in a separate section at the end of the paper and should be kept brief. Any acknowledgments should appear first, unnumbered.

7. We use the Author/Date system of citing references, as described in The ChicagoManual of Style (14th ed., University of Chicago Press, 1993). In the text or notes, works should be cited as follows (author, year, page number); for example (Anzaldúa 1990, 86). An author's name can be left out if understood from the context; for example (1990, 86). A list of all works cited should be included after the notes in a list called "References."

For example:

Benhabib, Seyla. 1992. Situating the self: Gender, community, and postmodernism in contemporary ethics. New York: Routledge. [book]

Clines, Francis X. 2001. Before and after: Voices in the wind, a new form of grieving evolves over last goodbyes. The New York Times, 16 September, Week in Review. [newspaper reference]

Collins, Patricia Hill. 2000. It's all in the family: Intersections of race, gender, and nation. In Decentering the center: Philosophy for a multicultural, postcolonial, and feminist world, ed. Uma Narayan and Sandra Harding. Bloomington: Indiana University Press. [article or chapter in a book—fully cite even when that book already appears in same reference list]

Education for All Handicapped Children Act. 1975. U.S. Public Law 94-142, U.S. Code. Vol. 20, sec. 1400 et seq. [U.S. public law or statute cited in text or in notes, not references]

Judt, Tony. 2002. America at war. In Striking terror: America's new war, ed. Robert...

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