Editorial note

Anthropology of History Yearbook (Rocznik Antropologii Historii) is issued under the Creative Commons licence CC BY-NC-ND 3.0 (except items decided differently). Submitting a text for print is equivalent to accepting regulations of the licence by its author.

 

Three subject sections are available to the authors

 STUDIES AND DISSERTATIONS - for research and issue papers 

POLEMICS AND DISCUSIONS - for presentation of disputed viewpoints and critical analyses of scientific publications (including reviews)

CHRONICLE - for discussions on scientific events, conferences, research projects, obituaries, etc. 

 

INSTRUCTIONS FOR PREPARING A TEXT FOR PRINTING

 

Instructions for preparing a text for printing  [pdf]

 

1. Texts should be sent to the editorial staff’s e-mail address (rah@rah.pth.net.pl) in the form of a text document (.doc, .docx, .rtf );

2. The submitted text should not exceed 1.5 publisher’s sheets (ca. 60,000 characters with spaces), the submitted text to Chronicle section should not exceed ca. five A4 pages (maximum 13,000 characters with spaces)

3. The submitted text should include:

     a) a summary in English, maximum half a printed page long (1,500 characters with spaces

     b) a key words in English

     c) a short biographical note in English about the author, including: education, affiliation, position, a current official e-mail address and ORCID iD.

4. The submitted text should be formatted as follows: justified text (aligned along both the left and right margins), pages numbered, Times New Roman 12 font, Times New Roman 10 font in footnotes, standard spacing between characters, 2.5 cm margins, 1.5 line spacing, first line of paragraph indented by 1.25 cm.

5. Footnotes should be compatible with American Anthropological Association Style Guide

 In-text citations

 Reference list

 The following examples, which illustrate a number of citation scenarios, may serve as a guide for formatting your entries.

 Books

Asad, Talal. 2003. Formations of the Secular: Christianity, Islam, Modernity. Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press.

Bender, Courtney, and Pamela E. Klassen. 2010. After Pluralism: Reimagining Religious Engagement. New York: Columbia University Press.

 Book Chapters

Bielo, James S. 2016. “Creationist History-Making: Producing a Heterodox Past.” In Lost City, Found Pyramid: Understanding Alternative Archaeologies and Pseudoscientific Practices, edited by J. J. Card and D. S. Anderson, 81-101. Tuscaloosa: University of Alabama Press.

Comaroff, Jean. 1996. “The Empire’s Old Clothes: Fashioning the Colonial Subject.” In Cross-Cultural Consumption: Global Markets, Local Realities, edited by David Howes, 19–38. London: Routledge.

 Chapter in Multivolume Work

Foucault, Michel. 2000. “Lives of Infamous Men.” In Power, edited by James Faubion and translated by Robert Hurley, 157–77. Vol. 3 of The Essential Works of Foucault, 1954–1984, edited by Paul Rabinow. New York: New Press. First published 1977.

 Edited Volume

Stoler, Ann, ed. 2013. Imperial Debris: On Ruins and Ruination. Durham, NC: Duke University Press.

 Translated Work

Mauss, Marcel. 2016. The Gift. Edited and translated by Jane I. Guyer. Chicago: Hau Books. Distributed by University of Chicago Press. First published 1925.

 Translations Supplied by Author

Pirumova, Nataliia Mikhailovna. 1977. Zemskoe liberal’noe dvizhenie: Sotsial’nye korni i evoliutsiia do nachala XX veka [The Zemstvo liberal movement: Its social roots and evolution to the beginning of the twentieth century]. Moscow: Izdatel’stvo “Nauka.”

Note that the original title should be transliterated, if necessary. Do not translate any other element of the reference besides the title.

 Journal Articles

Bessire, Lucas, and David Bond. 2014. “Ontological Anthropology and the Deferral of Critique.” American Ethnologist 41 (3): 440–56.

Bialecki, Jon. 2016. “Apostolic Networks in the Third Wave of the Spirit: John Wimber and the Vineyard.” Pneuma 38 (1-2):23–32.

**Yates-Doerr, Emily. 2015. “Does Meat Come from Animals? A Multispecies Approach to Classification and Belonging in Highland Guatemala.” American Ethnologist 42 (2): 309–23. doi:10.1111/amet.12132.

**DOIs should be included only if you really did consult the article online. They are preferable to URLs, being more stable. No access date is necessary in this case.

 Online Resources

*Daser, Deniz. 2014. “AE Interviews Catherine Lutz (Brown University).” American Ethnologist website, May 9. Accessed [Month Day, Year]. http://americanethnologist.org/2014/ae-interviews-catherine-lutz-brown-university.

*Note that online references require an access date.

Multimedia Source

Lemelson, Robert, dir. 2009. 40 Years of Silence: An Indonesian Tragedy. Los Angeles: Elemental Productions. DVD.

 Single Author and Coauthors

Meyer, Birgit. 2010. “Aesthetics of Persuasion: Global Christianity and Pentecostalism's Sensational Forms.” South Atlantic Quarterly 109 (4):741-63.

Meyer, Birgit, and Annelies Moors. 2006. Religion, Media, and the Public Sphere. Bloomington: Indiana University Press.

 Multiple References by the Same Author

Stout, Noelle. 2014. “Bootlegged: Unauthorized Circulation and the Dilemmas of Collaboration in the Digital Age.” Visual Anthropology Review 30 (2): 177–87.

Stout, Noelle. 2015a. “Generating Home.” Cultural Anthropology Online, March 30. Accessed [Month Day, Year]. http://culanth.org/fieldsights/655-generating-home.

Stout, Noelle. 2015b. “When a Yuma Meets Mama: Commodified Kin and the Affective Economies of Queer Tourism in Cuba.” Anthropological Quarterly 8 (33): 663–90.

 

For additional examples and information, please review Chapter 15 in the Chicago Manual of Style, 16th edition, or the Chicago-Style Citation Quick Guide.