Oxford German Studies

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Oxford German Studies (OGS) is an academic journal on aspects of German-speaking culture published by the University of Oxford (Great Britain).

The magazine appears in three, from 2014 in four editions per year, half of which are thematically focused.

history

The Oxford German Studies were in 1966 by Ernest L. steel, all-Peter , Malcolm Pasley and Jim Reed at the University of Oxford established (England) to research on German literature and culture in general to promote the Middle Ages to the present.

Editor and Editorial Advisory Board

The editors of Oxford German Studies are Jim Reed (The Queen's College Oxford) and Nigel F. Palmer ( St Edmund Hall Oxford), and in early 2017 Henrike Lähnemann (St Edmund Hall Oxford) took over the supervision of Medieval Studies. The OGS editorial board includes Jill Bepler ( Herzog August Bibliothek Wolfenbüttel), Katrin Kohl ( Jesus College Oxford), Susanne Köbele ( University of Zurich ), Karen Leeder ( New College Oxford) and Eve Rosenhaft ( University of Liverpool ).

profile

The Oxford German Studies published scientific papers on aspects of German culture. Articles in English or German will be published after the review process has been completed. The focus is on German literature from the Middle Ages to the present; The language, history, philosophy, music and visual arts of the German-speaking countries complement the literary focus. Criteria for the inclusion of contributions are that they are scientifically carefully worked, are easy to read, and have new content.

All submitted contributions are subject to peer review .

Abstracts and indices

Abstracts and indices of Oxford German Studies are listed in:

ISSN

Web link

Remarks

  1. ^ Nigel Palmer website at Oxford University
  2. Taylor & Francis magazine page
  3. See Ernest L. Stahl, 'Foreword', on Oxford German Studies 1 (1966), sp: "These [the constributions] will be mainly on German literary history, but the journal will also be open to work on related subjects, such as philosophy, art, and social history. "
  4. See Ernest L. Stahl, 'Foreword', on Oxford German Studies 1 (1966), sp: "scholarship"; "readability"; "Contributions which throw new light on their subject and are of more than antiquarian interest".
  5. Arts and Humanities Citation Index online  ( page no longer available , search in web archivesInfo: The link was automatically marked as defective. Please check the link according to the instructions and then remove this notice.@1@ 2Template: Dead Link / www.thomsonscientific.com