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SafetyLit Journal Details

We are unable to provide photocopies of any the articles and reports abstracted in SafetyLit updates. Where possible, links have been provided to the publisher of the material and contact information for the corresponding author is listed. Please consider asking your library to subscribe to the journals from which these abstracts have been gathered.

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Journal of European periodical studies

Abbreviation: J. Eur. Period. Stud.

Published by: Ghent University

Publisher Location: Gent, Belgium

Journal Website:
https://openjournals.ugent.be/jeps/issues/


Range of citations in the SafetyLit database: 2023; 8(1) -- 2023; 8(1)

Publication Date Range: 2016 --

Title began with volume (issue): 1(1)

Number of articles from this journal included in the SafetyLit database: 1
(Download all articles from this journal in CSV format.)

eISSN = 2506-6587

Find a library that holds this journal: http://worldcat.org/issn/25066587

Journal Language(s): English


Aims and Scope (from publisher): The Journal of European Periodical Studies is a bi-annual, peer-reviewed online open access journal published by Ghent University. The flagship journal of ESPRit, the European Society for Periodical Research, JEPS is devoted to the study of periodicals and newspapers in Europe from the seventeenth century to the present. It publishes research from a broad range of critical, theoretical and methodological perspectives, including, but not limited to, cultural history, literary studies, art history, gender studies, media studies, history of science and digital humanities. In recent decades, increasing numbers of scholars working in these and other disciplines across the humanities have explored the periodical press as a key site for cultural production, public debate and the dissemination of knowledge. Nevertheless, the study of magazines, newspapers, journals and other forms of periodical publication is still a fragmented field. Scholars usually focus on particular national traditions or historical periods. Much research remains to be done on the interactions among these traditions and the development of the periodical press over the long term.

JEPS offers scholars at any stage of their careers a forum for sharing their research and exchanging ideas across disciplinary borders. JEPS welcomes article submissions, special issue proposals, and suggestions for book reviews. We also publish "field notes", short pieces about ongoing research, reflections, or debating points.