Research: Journals
NARRATIVE
Submissions
Instructions to Contributors
Narrative publishes essays on narrative theory, essays on narrative and its relations to other modes of discourse, and essays of practical criticism based in diverse theoretical modes. The editors especially welcome submissions combining theoretical investigation and practical criticism. "Narrative" for us is a category that includes the novel, narrative poetry, history, biography, autobiography, film, and performance art. Because of our diverse audience, we are not interested in essays whose main contribution is to offer a new reading of a narrative by Author X. However, we do welcome new readings that are linked with some theoretical exploration or that are of interest in some other way to those who are not specialists in X.Examples that indicate--but do not exhaust--the range of the journal:
- explorations of theoretical issues, e.g., a consideration of the powers and limits of the story-discourse distinction;
- essays on narrative as a kind of discourse, e.g., narrative vs. lyric; film narrative in relation to verbal narrative;
- combinations of theoretical inquiry and practical application, e.g., a reexamination of the relationship between homodiegetic and heterodiegetic narration in connection with an analysis of the narration of Vanity Fair;
- readings of individual narratives that are part of some larger theoretical project or that point to implications beyond the particular text under discussion, e.g., Middlemarch's relation to Victorian conceptions of ideal femininity or Lord Jim's place in a Marxist history of the novel;
- readings of individual narratives that significantly revise received opinions about them or that are especially compelling performances in themselves.
- essays of institutional criticism or cultural commentary that focus on narrative or issues in narrative studies, e.g., an analysis of the implied narratives of different kinds of pedagogy; a study of the culture war as a struggle over narrative authority.
or
NarrativeJames Phelan, Editor
Department of English
The Ohio State University
164 W. 17th Avenue
Columbus, OH 43210-1370
Manuscript Requirements
Format: Narrative follows a house style based on The Chicago Manual of Style (14th ed.). Authors should submit two copies of their manuscripts and, if they want the manuscripts returned, a self-addressed, stamped envelope. Manuscripts should be typewritten in English and double-spaced on one side of 8-1/2 by 11 inch white bond paper with one inch margins and with left margin justification only. After papers have been accepted for publication, revisions should be submitted on one hard copy and on a 3-1/2 inch disk formatted in Word Perfect or Microsoft Word. While we prefer Microsoft Word files, Word Perfect documents are acceptable.Quotations: Quotations of fewer than eight lines are run into the text; quotations of eight lines or more are indented ten spaces from the left margin and double-spaced.
Because all sources will have full bibliographic information on the Works Cited page, parenthetical information will be minimal (usually including the cited author's name, the page from which the quotation is taken, and, if the essay refers to more than one work by the same author, additional clarifying information, such as dates or abbreviated titles; if the cited author's name appears in the text, it is not given parenthetically). If parenthetical information is needed to augment textual information, please choose from the following formats, depending upon what information is included in the text: (Genette 74), (Genette, Narrative Discourse 74), ( Narrative Discourse 74), or ( Narrative Discourse). Use commas only to separate author and abbreviated title or to separate numbers; a comma is not needed between author and page number or title and page number. Parenthetical bibliographic information identifying sources should omit “p.,” “pp.,” or “page” unless confusion will result.
Endnotes: Narrative uses endnotes, not footnotes, for commentary; include limited bibliographic information as necessary in endnotes, but provide full bibliographic information for all references on the double-spaced works cited page (see below). Authors should submit separate endnote sheets at the end of their manuscripts, following The Chicago Manual of Style.
Works Cited Page: All submissions should include a double-spaced works cited page following the style formats in chapters 15 and 16 of The Chicago Manual of Style (14th ed.). "University" should be abbreviated "Univ."; "Press" should be spelled out.
