Public Humanities is a new international open access, cross-disciplinary, peer-reviewed journal at the intersection of humanities scholarship and public life. The journal invites proposals for themed issues that pose urgent questions on contemporary public issues that require rigorous and relevant humanities knowledge.
The journal invites submissions to its upcoming Themed Issue ‘The How-To Issue’, which will be edited by Jeffrey R. Wilson.
The deadline for submissions is 1 January 2025.
Description
Public humanities often require an expert in one area to learn another field or skill on-the-fly or to collaborate effectively across boundaries of specialization. Especially for younger thinkers and doers, fear of the unknown combines with taken-for-granted assumptions about standard forms of humanities work to prevent our pursuit of promising public humanities projects and careers. Even veteran humanities scholars who have extensive expertise in areas vitally important to public life can crumble when confronted with the prospect of moving outside their comfort zone of academic protocols to engage with audiences via new formats or professional pathways.
This issue invites practical guidance on doing public humanities. That work often involves meeting audiences where they are via media, formats, and professions that require (1) conceptual understanding of what these venues offer and (2) technical training in the nuts-and-bolts of best practices. The How-To Issue will feature a series of case studies, reflections and essays by people who have had success in a variety of formats related to public humanities (e.g., museums, activism, podcasts, policy work, etc.) offering critical reflection and guidance to people in the next generation who might be interested in those pathways but aren’t really sure where to start or how to do it. From public writing to social media, from graduate program administration to empirical research, from fundraising to publishing, the issue will provide concrete case studies of successes, failures, lessons learned the hard way, and time-tested strategies for turning ideas into realities.
The editor invites papers covering any form of public humanities, including but not limited to:
- Activism
- Blogs
- Book Clubs
- Community Conversations
- Cultural Organizations
- Educational Departments
- Empirical Studies
- Evaluation
- Funding and fundraising
- Grants
- Libraries
- Mass Media
- Multimedia Formats
- Museums
- Podcasts
- Policy
- Practice-Based Research
- Program Administration
- Public Programs and Events
- Public Schools (Pre-College)
- Public Writing
- Researching the Public Humanities
- Social Media
- Websites
Submissions can include any or all of the follow article types:
Article type | Length | Abstract required | Description |
Reflection | 1,500-4,000 words | No | Theorizing the affordances and impact of a format or profession. |
Case Study | 2,000-4,000 words | Yes | An article that provides an in-depth, detailed examination of a particular case and narrates challenges, successes, failures, and lessons learned. |
Essay | 1,500-4,000 | No | A discussion paper that reflects critically on a particular form of public humanities. |
Submission guidelines
Submissions should be written in accessible language for a wide readership across and beyond the humanities.
Articles will be peer reviewed for both content and style. Articles will appear digitally and open access in the journal.
All submissions should be made through the Public Humanities online peer review system. Author should consult the journal’s Author Instructions prior to submission.
Contacts
Guest Editor name: Jeffrey R. Wilson
Email: [email protected]
Questions regarding peer review can also be sent to the Public Humanities inbox at [email protected]