Southern Cultures, the award-winning quarterly of the UNC Center for the Study of the
American South, is planning four special issues in 2019 to mark its 25th year
of publication. The four themes— Backward/Forward, Inside/Outside, Left/Right,
and Here/Away—will highlight where the South is coming from and where it’s
going, who’s included and who’s left out, how it’s changing and how it’s not,
what’s near and what’s far. We’d like contributors to interpret these themes
broadly and creatively, mixing serious interpretations of the South’s history,
future, space, and politics with reimagined takes on what these tropes should
mean going forward.
We invite
submissions from scholars, writers, and visual artists for our Summer 2019
issue, Inside/Outside, through November 15, 2018, at Southern Cultures submit.
Inside/Outside
will explore and document the South’s communities and contours. What or where
is the inside, and who are its gatekeepers? Who counts as southern? Who or what
is included or excluded, and why? Which voices will be heard, and which will
not? We’re looking for solidly grounded studies on major themes, speculations
about what’s coming, reflections on the distant past or future, and snapshots
of yesterday, today, and tomorrow. Who will be welcome?
Submissions
can cover any topic or theme related to southern history and culture. We seek
pieces that examine the South across time, explore new understandings of the
region and its peoples, identify current communities and concerns, and address
ongoing struggles for justice and expression going forward. We welcome
explorations of the region in the forms Southern Cultures publishes: scholarly
articles, memoir, interviews, surveys, photo essays, and shorter feature
essays.
Possible
topics and questions to explore might include (but are certainly not limited
to):
- Inclusion/exclusion
- Memory
- Reconciliation and reckoning
- Belonging
- Race, gender & sexuality, and class
- Education
- Religion
- Voting and elections
- Landscape and the built environment
- Art, media, and popular culture
- (Im)migration and demographic change
- Boundaries, borders, and the in-between
- Language and nomenclature
- Classification and categorization
- Health and healthcare
- Food and foodways
- Generational shifts and intergenerational tensions/alliances
As Southern Cultures publishes digital content online, we encourage creativity in
coordinating print and digital materials in submissions and ask that authors
submit any potential video, audio, and interactive visual content with their
essay or introduction/artist’s statement.
We
encourage authors to gain familiarity with the tone, scope, and style of our
journal before submitting. Those with access to Project Muse can read past
issues for free. To read our current issue and our submission guidelines, or
browse our content, please visit Southern Cultures.
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