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NEWS
INDEX
Archives
2004
August
Journal of Women's History finds
new home at University of Illinois
Andrea
Lynn, Humanities Editor
217-333-2177; andreal@uiuc.edu
8/30/04
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Click
photo to enlarge |
| Photo
by Kwame Ross |
| U. of
I. history professors Jean Allman, left, and Antoinette Burton
will co-edit the Journal of Women’s History– the
first devoted exclusively to the international field of women’s
history. |
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CHAMPAIGN,
Ill. — The University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign is the new
editorial home of the prestigious Journal of Women’s History (JWH).
Previously at Ohio State University, the journal’s editorial base
relocated to the U. of I. in July after Illinois’ proposal won
out over those of several competing universities.
U. of I. history professors
Jean Allman and Antoinette Burton will co-edit the journal – the
first devoted exclusively to the international field of women’s
history. The professors have extensive experience as editors of anthologies,
books reviews and a book series. Allman also is the new director of
Illinois’ Center for African
Studies; Burton has been on the editorial boards of several national
and international journals.
The Journal of Women’s History advisory board for the coming year
consists of three U. of I. history professors, Megan McLaughlin, Elizabeth
Pleck and Leslie Reagan. Marilyn Booth, a U. of I. professor of comparative
and world literature with a specialty in Arabic literature, will
serve as the books editor. History graduate students Jennifer Edwards
and Rebecca McNulty will be the managing editors.
Indiana University Press had published the journal from its inception
until this year, when publication moved to Johns Hopkins University.
The editorial team has shifted bases over the years, starting at Indiana
and then moving to Iowa State University and Ohio State.
The new editors said that in pursuing the editorship, they received
“invaluable financial support” from the history department,
the dean of the College of Liberal
Arts and Sciences, the vice chancellor for research and the Illinois
Humanities Council.
Illinois’ first official issue, 17:1, will come out in Winter
2005, “so it will be about a year before we have our full stamp
on the journal,” Allman said.
History professor Clare Crowston is organizing the first special issue
on “Women, Material Culture and Consumption.”
Allman and Burton said that in terms of its subscription base, its international
reputation and its scholarly quality, the journal has never been stronger.
In their proposal they wrote: “Over the course of almost a decade
and a half, the journal has successfully bridged the divide between
‘women’s’ and ‘gender’ history by foregrounding
women as active historical subjects in a multiplicity of places and
times.
“Both by design and by virtue of the diverse research undertaken
by scholars of women, gender and feminism, the journal itself constitutes
a living archive of what women’s and gender history has been,
as well as a testament to its indispensable place in the historical
profession at large.”
The editors say that their vision for the journal has many facets. Among
other things, they intend to enhance the journal’s consideration
of international, transnational and global issues; facilitate easier
international access to the Web version of the journal; work on strategies
for bridging the gap between the so-called “first-world”
scholarly production and the so-called “third-world” access
or participation; and draw graduate students into professional training
by running a workshop on feminist scholarship and publishing.
Allman and Burton said that the U. of I. offers “an exciting and
attractive locale for the journal at this moment of transition”
largely because the core faculty in women’s and gender history
in the department of history is nearly a dozen strong; the history department
counts more than a dozen other faculty members who have expertise in
women’s and gender history; and the work of scholars in other
units, including the Gender and
Women’s Studies Program and the Women
and Gender in Global Perspectives Program, intersects directly with
women’s history.
They also acknowledged the U.
of I. Library, which ranks third among academic libraries in North
America and first among public university libraries in the world, as
an invaluable asset in the work of producing an international journal.
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