European Journal of Cultural Studies
European Journal of Cultural Studies is a major international, peer-reviewed journal founded in Europe and edited from the Netherlands and the UK. The journal promotes a conception of cultural studies rooted in lived experience. It adopts a broad-ranging view of cultural studies, charting new questions and new research, and mapping the transformation of cultural studies in the years to come.
The journal publishes well theorized empirically grounded work from a variety of locations and disciplinary backgrounds. It engages in critical discussions on power relations concerning gender, class, sexual preference, ethnicity and other macro or micro sites of political struggle.
European Journal of Cultural Studies is available on SAGE Journals Online.
Submit your manuscript today at https://mc.manuscriptcentral.com/ecs
European Journal of Cultural Studies is a major international journal that publishes well-theorized empirical research from a wide variety of locations and disciplinary backgrounds in the humanities and the social sciences. Founded in Europe and edited from the Netherlands and the UK, the journal has a broad-ranging view of cultural studies, charting new questions and new research, and mapping the transformation of cultural studies to come. The common denominator for the work published is in engagement with and a critical take on how power relations are (re)produced in everyday practices of meaning making. They might concern gender, class, race and ethnicity, sexuality, sexual preference, disability and other macro or micro sites of political struggle.
The topics covered by European Journal of Cultural Studies cover a wide range. This is a result of our double focus on relations of power and processes of meaning making as the twin sides to how ‘culture’ is produced. Topic areas include (among others): popular cultural forms and practices; music; consumer cultures; media, film and television culture; post-colonial criticism; cultural policy; citizenship, sexualities, youth culture and class relations; intersectional constructions of identity; populism; creative industries.
THE KIND OF PAPERS WE WISH TO PUBLISH
While cultural studies is sometimes understood as a very generic term, we are not interested in publishing studies of culture that focus exclusively on single objects. Partly because such work is done in other disciplinary areas (such as the study of art and literature), more importantly because we feel the study of culture and cultural forms always needs wider contextualization to include how objects, practices or ideas are inserted in relations of power.
We expect authors to move beyond their own interpretation or reading of a cultural text, object or practice, a.o. by including a clear and convincing note on the methodology used in selecting materials (whether texts, interviews, policy documents or other types of data), and on how these materials are analysed. Discourse analysis, visual and narrative analysis, grounded theory and ethnography are among the methods of analysis that can be used. We are interested in how meaning is constructed and in how power relations are produced. Papers concentrating on social and cultural theory are welcome when they e.g. review a new theoretical trend. Typically these would be review articles.
Yiu Fai Chow | Hong Kong Baptist University, Hong Kong |
Jilly Kay | Loughborough University, UK |
Jo Littler | Goldsmiths, University of London, UK |
Anamik Saha | University of Leeds, UK |
Siao Yuong Fong | King’s College London, UK |
Jian Lin | Chinese University of Hong Kong, China |
Erin Bell | University of Lincoln, UK |
Linda Kopitz | University of Amsterdam, Netherlands |
Jessica Martin | University of Leeds, UK |
Annelot Prins | Freie Universität Berlin, Germany |
Pertti Alasuutari | Tampere University, Finland |
Ann Gray | University of Lincoln, UK |
Joke Hermes | InHolland University, Netherlands |
Mark Andrejevic | Pomona College, USA |
Ien Ang | University of Western Sydney, Nepean, Australia |
Yildiz Atasoy | Simon Fraser University, Canada |
Hermann Bausinger | Ludwig-Uhland-Institut, Tübingen, Germany |
Tony Bennett | University of Western Sydney, Australia |
Goran Bolin | Sodertorn University, Sweden |
David Buckingham | Loughborough University, UK |
Chua Beng Huat | National University of Singapore, Singapore |
Nick Couldry | London School of Economics, UK |
Jeroen de Kloet | University of Amsterdam |
Abram de Swaan | University of Amsterdam, Netherlands |
Norman Denzin | University of Illinois, Urbana - Champaign, USA |
Alexander Dhoest | University of Antwerp, Belgium |
Linda Duits | University of Amsterdam, Netherlands |
Johan Fornäs | Södertörn University, Sweden |
Simon Frith | University of Edinburgh, UK |
Christine Geraghty | University of Glasgow, UK |
David Hesmondhalgh | University of Leeds, UK |
Roman Horak | University of Vienna, Austria |
Ksenija V. Horvat | University of Ljubljana, Slovenia |
Laura Huttunen | University of Tampere, Finland |
Eeva Jokinen | University of Jyväskylä, Finland |
Giselinde Kuipers | KU Leuven University, Belgium |
Maureen McNeil | Lancaster University, UK |
David Morley | Goldsmiths College, University of London, UK |
Elspeth Probyn | University of Sydney, Australia |
Ali Qadir | University of Tampere, Finland |
Gilbert B. Rodman | University of Minnesota, USA |
Kim Schroeder | Roskilde University, Denmark |
Ellen Seiter | University of Southern California, United States, USA |
Jon Stratton | University of South Australia, Australia |
Anna Lisa Tota | University of Rome III, Italy |
Imogen Tyler | Lancaster University, UK |
Liesbet van Zoonen | Erasmus University Rotterdam, Netherlands |
Rainer Winter | University of Klagenfurt, Austria |
Handel Kashope Wright | University of British Columbia, Canada |
Manuscript submission guidelines can be accessed on Sage Journals.