The Cambridge Quarterly

The Cambridge Quarterly ( CQ ) is a scientific journal that is devoted to the literature as an art form, but also the other arts. It is published at the University of Cambridge (UK ) and edited, but appears by Oxford University Press.

History

The Cambridge Quarterly was founded in 1966 by Harold Andrew Mason at the University of Cambridge. Currently, the magazine of Raphael Lyne and Geoff C. Ward is issued.

Publication

The journal is published in four issues per year. All submitted papers are subject to peer review. Every year, the editors write a prize for the best Cambridge University Finals dissertation, which is then published in The Cambridge Quarterly.

Profile

The Cambridge Quarterly published work on the (world) literature that is decidedly understood as a form of art, not as a general communication medium. Also essays on the visual arts, film and music are published in CQ. Without compromising the scientific quality permit, the editors urge their authors in a manner of writing that also reached an out - academic audience.

Abstracts and indexes

Abstracts and indexes of CQ be conducted in:

  • Arts and Humanities Citation Index
  • British Humanities Index
  • Current Contents
  • Humanities Index / Abstracts / Full Text
  • IBZ International Bibliography of Humanities and Social Science Periodical Literature
  • Literature Online ( LION)
  • Modern Language Association International Bibliography
  • Periodicals Archive Online ( PAO)
  • Periodicals Index Online ( PIO)

ISSN

  • Print ISSN: 0008- 199X
  • Online ISSN: 1471-6836

Weblink

  • Site of CQ by Oxford University Press
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