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American Society for Ethnohistory  
 

 

Subscribe to Ethnohistory Quarterly

Over 1200 individuals and institutions currently receive the journal Ethnohistory. Following the Editor's statement is information on submitting manuscripts to the journal, on reviewing books for the journal, and on where articles published in Ethnohistory can be found in indexes and electronic databases.

 

Editor's Statement, Fall 2003

Ethnohistory reflects the wide range of current scholarship that is inspired by anthropological and historical approaches to the human condition. Of particular interest are those analyses and interpretations that seek to make evident the experience, organization and identities of indigenous, diasporic and minority peoples that otherwise elude the histories and anthropologies of nations, states and colonial empires. In the past the journal has published work from the disciplines of geography, literature, sociology and archaeology, as well as anthropology and history, and such submissions are encouraged. The defining characteristic of editorial policy is an openness to the theoretical and cross-cultural discussion of ethnohistorical materials, and a recognition of the wide range of academic disciplines that may have material of interest and relevance to the readers of Ethnohistory.

The journal publishes peer-reviewed articles, commentaries, and book reviews as well as Theme Issues, that collect related submissions on a theoretical topic or geographical area, and Special Issues, under a guest editor, that present the very best of emergent ethnohistorical scholarship. Recent Special issues have included volumes on Colonial Venezuela, Madagascar, the Hacienda, and Tourism among Native Peoples.

 

The Editorial Office

Editors

Michael Harkin
(University of Wyoming - ethnohis@uwyo.edu)

Matthew Restall
(Penn State University)

Editorial Board

Guillaume Boccara (Maison des Sciences de l'Homme),
Gérard Collomb (Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique),
Gregory Dowd (University of Michigan),
Morris Foster
(University of Oklahoma),
Brian Hosmer
(Newberry Library),
Sergei Kan (Dartmouth College),
Kris Lane (College of William and Mary),
Peter Nabokov
(UCLA),
Fernando Santos-Granero (Smithsonian Institution),
Peter Sigal
(California State University), and
Kevin Terraciano (UCLA).

 

Subscription

To Subscribe to Ethnohistory and Join the ASE, complete the subscription link at Duke University Press.

 

Project Muse & J-Stor

All Ethnohistory articles are available in PDF and HTML formats from 1999 onwards to users whose institution subscribes to the Johns Hopkins Project Muse electronic texts database. In most case, to access the site you need to be on the institutional network. Also Pre-2000 are available at J-Stor.