Founded In    2006
Published   3/year
Language(s)   English, French, Spanish
     

Fields of Interest

 

- Culture Studies - Literary Studies - History - Political Studies - Social Studies - Hemispheric/Transatlantic perspectives - other fields of interdisciplinary American studies relevant to the issue

     
ISSN   1991-2773
     
Editorial Board

heo D’haen, Anders Olsson, Liam Kennedy, Sieglinde Lemke, Giorgio Mariani,Ian Tyrrell, Helmbrecht Breinig, Rosario Faraudo, Djelal Kadir

Submission Guidelines and Editorial Policies

* RIAS welcomes submissions from all disciplines and approaches and from all parts of the world, provided that they pertain to ‘America’ in the broadest implications of that term.
  * RIAS is primarily intended for members of IASA, who have total access to the journal. All other users have limited access.
  * Submissions can be sent to the editor, Michael Boyden, via RIAS web-based submission form at www.iasa-rias.org
  * RIAS appears three times a year, in the Fall, Winter and Spring. Copy deadlines for unsolicited submissions are mid-July, mid-November, and mid-March respectively.
  * RIAS welcomes short position papers (approximately 1,000 to 2,000 words) that deal with topical issues in the international arena of American Studies.
  * Longer articles (feature texts/research articles) will be refereed. Such articles should be of general interest to the international American Studies community. If you have a proposal for an article, please contact the editor with a brief synopsis.
  * We also post calls for papers or contributions, notices, conference reports, news from IASA members, as well as book reviews.
  * Suggestions for special issues, forum topics, or similar initiatives should be addressed to the editor. - Every submission should be accompanied by the author’s name and institutional affiliation. Articles should also include an abstract of no more than ten lines.
  * In principle, we accept contributions in all ‘American’ languages (i.e. English, French, Spanish, Portuguese, etc.). Accompanying abstracts should be in English (and, if appropriate, in the language of the article’s composition).
  * Authors retain the copyright to their contributions. This means that texts can be republished elsewhere on the condition that acknowledgment is made to RIAS.
  * Authors who wish to reproduce materials already published elsewhere should get permission from the copyright holder(s).

 

     
Mailing Address
     

JOURNAL CONTACT INFORMATION
E-mail the Editors
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF: Michael Boyden
CO-EDITORS: Paweł Jędrzejko and Cyraina Johnson-Roullier
ADVISORS for IT: Tomasz Adamczewski, Wojciech Liber

General correspondence and matters concerning the functioning of the RIAS should be addressed to:

Dr. Michael Boyden
RIAS Editor-in-Chief,
K.U.Leuven
Faculteit Letteren
Departement Literatuurwetenschap
Blijde-Inkomststraat
21B-3000 Leuven
Belgium

RIAS

Review of International American studies

(Based on excerpts from the Welcome Address of the former President of the International American Studies Association, Prof. Paul Giles)
 
The Review of International American Studies, the online journal of the International American Studies Association (IASA). IASA, which held its first conference in Leiden in 2003, is organized around the understanding that in the twenty-first century American Studies, however that term is defined, can be properly discussed only in a global perspective. Many different views have been put forward as to what ‘America’ should mean - country, continent, hemisphere? - but the one thing on which most people are agreed is that in an era of increasing global circulation the international dimensions of American Studies can no longer be ignored.
  RIAS, available free to all members of IASA, offering past issues for free to the general Americanist public, is designed to facilitate that conversation. National associations of American Studies continue to make very valuable contributions to the subject, but much of their focus is necessarily on matters close to home: the protection of local programs, safeguarding faculty positions, attempting to raise the subject’s profile in often difficult circumstances, and so on. IASA, by contrast, offers the possibility of complementary or contrary perspectives which can expose practitioners of American Studies to intellectual outlooks very different from their own. This is not an ‘export’ model of American Studies, but one based upon the idea of reciprocal interaction, of mutual exchange and enlightenment. For academics based in North America or Europe, seeing how things appear from Australasia or Asia, Latin America or Africa, can often appear as a salutary corrective to the insularity of ideas often assumed, wrongly, to enjoy universal validity. From an ideological point of view, IASA might in this sense be said to be an almost deliberately incoherent organization, one that offers its members the prospect of finding their home-grown views colliding with others working from very different premises.
  The purpose of RIAS is simply to enable and promote the wide circulation of different ideas, so as to achieve more of a global balance in the rapidly internationalizing field of American Studies. Many interesting topics have been discussed and debated recently on the IASA Executive Council e-mail discussion list, and we hope that RIAS will help to bring these and other important issues to the attention of a wider audience. We invite contributions, both in the form of short position papers on topics of general interest, or through notices of forthcoming conferences, calls for papers, observations on developments in scholarship in different parts of the world, and so on. The function of RIAS, as indeed of IASA in general, is to enhance channels of communication among scholars concerned with American Studies in different parts of the world, so as to enable the subject to grow and develop in ways that may not be visible to any of us at the present time. While RIAS has no preconceived academic agenda, it will of course depend crucially for its usefulness on the participation of scholars in many different parts of the world. We hope that this e-journal will become a network of global intellectual exchange in American Studies, and, to this end, we warmly welcome contributions from all quarters.

 

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