Submissions

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Submission Preparation Checklist

As part of the submission process, authors are required to check off their submission's compliance with all of the following items, and submissions may be returned to authors that do not adhere to these guidelines.
  • The submission has not been previously published, nor is it before another journal or any other type work for consideration (or an explanation has been provided in Comments to the Editor).
  • The text follows the submission rules described in Instructions for Authors, section “About the Journal, namely having Microsoft Word format, using the 12 point font and space between lines of 1.5 points.
  • In the initial submission, three separate files should be sent: one with the text to be submitted containing all the identification elements of the author(s); another with the same text, but without these elements; another with a summary of the personal biography(ies), including the respective institutional affiliation(s) and ORCID identifier(s).
  • If the article contains images, they must be sent in .png or .jpg format and in separate files, that is, not inserted within the text itself, with a minimum resolution of 300 dpi. In the file referring to the text, the approximate location where figures, graphs, tables or the like should be inserted, should be indicated through the insertion of legends (in the language of the article).
  • Authors transfer copyright to Anthropocenica. Journal of Anthropocene Studies and Ecocriticism (ISSN 2184-8297 and e-ISSN 2184-8289).
  • The text follows the 7th edition of the American Psychology Association (APA) citation and bibliographic referencing system.

Author Guidelines

Papers proposed to Anthropocenica must be submitted electronically after registration has been completed.

 

Instructions for submission

1. The following categories of texts are admitted to the Journal:

  • Research articles with unpublished and consolidated research results;
  • Reviews about books published less than 4 years ago;
  • Translations of texts of recognized importance in the scientific community.

2. The texts must be submitted in a single file, with the following format:

  • Microsoft Word, extension * .doc, * .docx.
  • Times New Roman font, size 12, space between lines 1.5
  • Standard tab at the beginning of paragraphs
  • Page margins: 3 cm (top and left) and 2 cm (bottom and right).

3. Compuscripts of articles.

3.1. They must contain the following elements:

  • title in the language of the text and in Portuguese (título) with a maximum length of 20 words;
  • abstract in the language of the text and in Portuguese (resumo) between 150 and 200 words;
  • keywords, with a minimum of 4 (four) and a maximum of 6 (six), separated by semicolons, in the language of the text and in Portuguese (palavras-chave);
  • length between 7500 and 10000 words.

3.2. Title and inter-titles should only be capitalized in the first word, must not end with a period (although they may have other forms of punctuation – interrogation or exclamation – and can be numbered if the numbering favors the structure of the text.

3.3. Double curly quotation marks (“ ”) should be used for ironic expressions or words, slang or figurative meaning, to introduce quotes or the title of an article or book chapter.

3.4. Italics, not bold, must be used in the body of the text to indicate book titles, to introduce neologisms or foreign words, to mark words or expressions that deserve to be highlighted from a semantic point of view.

3.5. The graphic elements can be of three types: tables, graphs and figures (diagrams, drawings, photographs, infographics). In the body of the text, references to graphic elements always appear in full (e.g. in Table 1). All graphic elements have captions, not titles. Captions have no end period. Figures and tables must be inserted in the text and sent separately. The format used for graphics and figures, which should always be inserted in Word text, is JPEG or PNG, with a resolution of at least 300 dpi. Tables must be in an editable format, without converting to an image.

3.6. Obtaining authorization to use images is the sole responsibility of the authors.

3.7. Footnotes should be used, not endnotes.

4. Compuscripts of the reviews.

4.1. They must have a maximum length of 2000 words.

4.2. Follow 3.3 and 3.4.

4.3. They must not contain graphic elements.

4.4. They must not contain footnotes.

5. Compuscripts of translations.

5.1. They must be accompanied by a declaration of authorization for eventual publication in the journal, dated and signed by whoever holds the copyright of the translated text.

6. Citation and bibliographic referencing (APA referencing-citation system-7th edition).

6.1. In the body of the text.

6.1.1. All citations must be translated into the language in which the text is written. The original version of the translated excerpt is not placed at the bottom.

6.1.2. Citations are made within double angle quotation marks or guillemets («»), in normal text and not in italics. Citations with 40 or more words are highlighted in the body of the text, in indented tab, letter one lower point (12pt) and without quotation marks.

6.1.3. Bibliographical references related to in-text citations follow the following format: (Crutzen & Stoermer, 2000, p. 17). In citations in the body of the text, the punctuation (period or comma) is placed after the reference. Quotes in block end with a period before the reference.

6.1.4. Expressions such as idem, ibidem, apud, op. cit. are not used.

6.1.5. For citations in second reference: (quoted in Crutzen, 2002, p. 23) (quoted in Kovarick, Crutzen, 2002, p. 23).

6.2. References at the end of the text.

6.2.1. References must be listed in alphabetical order.

6.2.2. The three main types of bibliographic references used in academic texts include books, book chapters and articles in scientific journals:

  • Books
    • Bonneuil, C. & Fressoz, J.-B. (2016). The shock of the Anthropocene: The Earth, history and us (trans: Fernbach, D.). Verso.
    • Coupe, L., (ed.) (2000). The Green Studies Reader: From Romanticism to Ecocriticism. Routledge.
    • Glotfelty, C. & Fromm, H., (eds.) (1996). The Ecocriticism Reader: Landmarks in Literary Ecology. University of Georgia Press.
    • Schwägerl, C. (2014). The Anthropocene: the human era and how it shapes our planet (trans: Renner, L.). Synergetic Press.
  • Book chapters
    • Hamilton, C., Bonneuil, C. & Gemenne, F. (2015). Thinking the Anthropocene. In: C. Hamilton, C. Bonneuil & F. Gemenne (Eds.) (2015). The Anthropocene and the global environmental crisis: rethinking modernity in a new epoch (pp. 1–13). Routledge.
    • Slovic, S. (2000). Ecocriticism: Containing Multitudes, Practising Doctrine. In: Laurence Coupe (Ed.) (2000). The Green Studies Reader: From Romanticism to Ecocriticism (pp. 160-162). Routledge.
  • Articles in scientific journals
    • Crutzen, P. & Stoermer, E. (2000). The “Anthropocene”. Global Change Newsletter 41: 17-18.
    • Estok, S. (2009). Theorizing in a Space of Ambivalent Openness: Ecocriticism and Ecophobia. ISLE: Interdisciplinary Studies in Literature and the Environment 16: 203-25.
  • Documents on the Internet
    • References referring to locations on the Internet are preceded by the expression "Retrieved from", without mentioning the date of consultation of the link.
    • Slovic, S. (2008). The Third Wave of Ecocriticism: North American Reflections on the Current Phase of the discipline. Retirado de: http://ecozona.eu/ article/download/312/283
    • Trischler, H. (Ed.). (2013). Anthropocene Envisioning the Future of the Age of Humans. RCC Perspectives, 3. Retirado de: http://www.environmentandsociety.org/ sites/default/files/1303_anthro_web.pdf

7. Responsibility for personal information, grammatical and spelling corrections rests entirely with the author, or the main author, in case of co-authorship.

8. For the evaluation to be done anonymously, the text sent must not contain any references that could identify the authorship.

8.1. A document containing the text, but removing any identifying information from it, including name(s) of the author(s), institutional affiliation, acknowledgments, funding, self-citations, etc. In the text, this information can be provisionally replaced by expressions such as “[reference removed to maintain the integrity of the review process]”. References of the author(s)'s work must appear at the top of the list of references as “Author(s)” or “Citation of Author(s)” with the year of publication.

8.2. Another document containing the following information: (a) title of the text; (b) name(s) of the author(s); (c) biographical note with some curricular data of the author(s), including complete information on the institutional affiliation (University/Faculty/Department or Research Center) of all authors; full addresses (including street, postal code, city and country), email address and ORCID identifier. These data will be available in the published version of the article, so, when providing them, the author(s) consent to their disclosure in that volume of the journal.

 

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