Jewish Social Studies
About Jewish Social Studies
Jewish Social Studies: History, Culture, Society (New Series) seeks to advance the understanding of Jewish life and its past. Its emphasis is on history--particularly modern and early modern history in all of its aspects, but the journal features work in disciplines as varied as anthropology, politics, sociology, religion, and literature, as well as history. Issues of identity and peoplehood, comparisons and contrasts in the evolution of distinctive Jewish societies and cultures around the world, and the possibilities opened by gender as an analytical category are among the themes of interest to the journal. Jewish Social Studies publishes self-reflective and monographic articles in an effort to rechart the boundaries of Jewish historical scholarship.
Jewish Social Studies, edited by Tony Michels, Kenneth Moss, and Sarah Abrevaya Stein, is published three times a year by Indiana University Press. It is a project of the Conference on Jewish Social Studies and is funded, in part, by a grant from the Lucius N. Littauer Foundation. For subscription information, you may either stop by the Taube Center for Jewish Studies Office in Building 360, Room 362H for a brochure, or contact Indiana University Press at:
Indiana University Press
Office of Scholarly Publishing
Herman B. Wells Library 350
1320 E. 10th Street
Bloomington, IN 47405-3907
http://www.iupjournals.org
phone 812.856.0582 / fax 812.855.8507
Authors may view the journal’s style guide and submit manuscripts for consideration via the journal’s online submissions portal: http://bit.ly/iup_jss. Inquiries concerning manuscript submission should be directed to the editorial staff at jss@stanford.edu.