Configurations is the journal of the Society for Literature, Science, and the Arts (SLSA), which fosters the multidisciplinary study of the relations among literature and language, the arts, science, medicine, and technology. The journal solicits articles on all aspects of the problems of science and representation, and the cultural and social dimensions of science, technology, and medicine. It is multidisciplinary in scope: the history, sociology, anthropology, rhetoric, and philosophy of science, technology, and medicine; literary history and criticism; art history and media studies; the cognitive sciences; and all areas of science, technology, engineering, and medicine. To be considered, works should be readable by a broad audience, including informed researchers, practitioners, artists, scholars, and students outside the particular discipline. Configurations is published by the Johns Hopkins University Press.
Original manuscripts should be submitted electronically to co-editors Melissa Littlefield and Rajani Sudan at configurations@smu.edu. The average length of articles is 10,000 words (1000-1500 for book reviews), though this can vary widely according to discipline. Manuscripts should be double-spaced throughout and be accompanied by an abstract of approximately 100 words and a brief list of keywords. All manuscripts are edited according to The Chicago Manual of Style, 16th ed. (University of Chicago Press).
Please submit your file in one of the following formats: MS Word (.doc) or Rich Text Format (.rtf). Tables and illustrations will be accepted when necessary for the presentation of ideas; tables must be submitted as separate pdf files, and illustrations as digital images (high-resolution .jpeg, .tiff, or .eps files).
Book reviews are usually solicited, but proposals for reviews may be sent to Jay Labinger, Book Review Editor, Configurations (jal@caltech.edu).
Please send queries concerning special issues to the editors at configurations@smu.edu. In your email, please include:
All headings and endnotes should be in accordance with The Chicago Manual of Style (CMS) . Use no more than two levels of headings (A and B levels). Endnotes are numbered in text by superscripts. Text to appear in italics should be in roman type, underlined, in the manuscript.
Book references should include author(s), [chapter title], book title, [edition], [editors], place of publication, publisher, year, and inclusive page numbers (of citation):
All subsequent citations (for both books and journals) should use only the author(s)’ surname(s) and short title (see CMS 16.44–45), along with the endnote number of its first, full citation:
Journal references should include author(s), article title, journal title, volume no., issue no., year, and inclusive page numbers:
Newspaper references should include author(s), headline, name of newspaper, and date (but not section and page numbers; see CMS 17.188. For newspapers published on the Internet, adding a URL will show that an online edition was consulted):
Internet references should provide full URL (though no access date; see CMS 17.12):
Personal communications (conversations, letters, e-mail messages, and the like) are cited as endnotes:
For quoted text citations with italicized material, state in endnotes the source of emphasis:
For all other Configurations style and formatting questions, please refer to The Chicago Manual of Style, 16th ed.
The Hopkins Press Journals Ethics and Malpractice Statement can be found at the ethics-and-malpractice page.
Configurations accepts original research submissions on topics that bring together the humanities, sciences, and social sciences. Submissions must be non-simultaneous and any conflict(s) of interest should be disclosed. Preliminary review for fit and strength of argument is conducted in-house by at least one of the Co-Editors. Peer review is a double blind process in which we ask reviewers to 1) assess to relevance of the manuscript’s topic to our readership; 2) assess the strength of the manuscript’s arguments, organization, and the quality of its research. Papers are graded on a scale that includes the following designations: accept, accept with minor revisions, revise and resubmit, reject but encourage submission of a reworked manuscript, or reject. If revision is requested, we perform an in-house evaluation of the revised manuscript before deciding which (if any) of the original reviewers will be asked to read and evaluate the new version of the paper. Our current timeline for review is 4-6 months. We also encourage the submission of special issue proposals and our Book Review Editor solicits copies of recently published books for review.
Melissa M. Littlefield, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign
Rajani Sudan, Southern Methodist University
Jay Labinger, California Institute of Technology
Matthew Adamson, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign
Kelly Evans, Southern Methodist University
Ronald Schleifer, University of Oklahoma
Robert Markley, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign
Alan Rauch, University of North Carolina at Charlotte
Hugh Crawford, Georgia Institute of Technology
Kenneth J. Knoespel, Georgia Institute of Technology
James Bono, SUNY/Buffalo
Hank Southgate
Stacy Alaimo, University of Texas, Arlington
Charles Bazerman, University of California, Santa Barbara
Ian Bogost, Georgia Institute of Technology
Joyce Chaplin, Harvard University
Bruce Clarke, Texas Tech University
Carol Colatrella, Georgia Institute of Technology
Lucinda Cole, University of Southern Maine
Martin Danahay, Brock University
Tore Frängsmyr, University of Uppsala, Sweden
Mark Greenberg, Drexel University
Richard Grusin, Wayne State University
Donna Haraway, University of California, Santa Cruz
Sandra Harding, University of Delaware and UCLA
David Harpp, McGill University
N. Katherine Hayles, Duke University
Timothy Lenoir, Stanford University
Robert Markley, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign
Deidre McCloskey, University of Illinois, Chicago
Rob Mitchell, Duke University
Timothy Morton, University of California, Davis
Richard Nash, Indiana University
Laura Otis, Emory University
Stuart Peterfreund, Northeastern University
Henry Petroski, Duke University
David Porush, MentorNet
Nigel Rothsfels, University of Wisconsin–Milwaukee
Joseph Rouse, Wesleyan University
Londa Schiebinger, Stanford University
Ronald Schleifer, University of Oklahoma
Howard Segal, University of Maine
Steven Shapin, Harvard University
Steven Shaviro, Wayne State University
Sally Shuttleworth, University of Oxford, St Anne’s College
Susan Squier, Pennsylvania State University
Barbara Stafford, University of Chicago
Elizabeth Wilson, Emory University
Book reviews are usually solicited, but proposals for reviews may be sent to Jay Labinger, Book Review Editor, Configurations (jal@caltech.edu).
Review copies received by the Johns Hopkins University Press office will be discarded.
Source: Ulrichsweb Global Serials Directory.
0.3 (2023)
0.5 (Five-Year Impact Factor)
0.00040 (Eigenfactor™ Score)
Rank in Category (by Journal Impact Factor):
72 of 104 journals, in “History & Philosophy of Science”
© Clarivate Analytics 2024
Published four times a year in January, April, July, and October
Readers include: Scholars in history, sociology, anthropology, rhetoric, and philosophy of science, technology, and medicine; literary history and criticism; art history and media studies; the cognitive sciences; and other researchers and practitioners in all areas of science, technology, and medicine. Also includes all members of the Society for Literature and Science.
Print circulation: 472
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January Issue - November 15
May Issue - March 15
September Issue - July 15
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"Configurations has been indispensable for my thinking and writing. It is an invaluable resource for cultural studies of science, technology, and medicine."
-Emily Martin, Princeton University
"Configurations brings to 'science studies' a literary-critical sophistication it has long needed. This well-edited journal is well on its way to becoming the Representations of this part of the academy."
-David A. Hollinger, University of California, Berkeley
"...a treasure trove for scholars across the academy, serving as the serious home for discussions of science, technology, and medicine as it is reflected in and reflects aspects of culture. Written by people who are specialists in more than one discipline, it shows that communicating across boundaries is possible when one writes clearly and directly."
-Sander L. Gilman, Cornell University
"In a world that needs more such meeting points, there is nothing like Configurations. A true nexus of science and literature, the journal is scholarly, informative, and readable."
-Ronald Hoffmann, Cornell University
"The journal is a kind of workshop, joining historical, literary, and cultural perspectives on science. Here you get interpretive originality without sacrificing scholarship."
-Theodore M. Porter, UCLA
"Configurations is a challenging and provocative resource for cutting edge cultural studies of science, technology, and literature. Exciting for its interdisciplinarity in an era when the disciplinary boundaries of knowledge are breaking down, it is quite indispensible!"
-John Law, Keele University, UK
"Configurations is a striking journal, at once interdisciplinary and brave in its undogmatic explorations. At a time when many of our best-known journals have become predictable, Configurations has remained open to new thoughts and approaches."
-Peter Galison, Harvard University
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