International Journal of Slavic Linguistics and Poetics

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Languages of publication

The articles were published in English, French, German, Polish, and Russian. [2] [1] The system developed for the Romanization of Russian in the journal employed Czech diacritics. [4]

Scope and indexing

The concept behind the name is defined in Roman Jakobson's paper, Linguistics and Poetics, printed as a chapter in MIT Press' Style in Language in 1960. [5] The paper was reprinted in Poetry of Grammar and Grammar of Poetry 3 in 1981. [6] The journal carried on the tradition of Jakobsonian structuralism and philology even after his death, but "by no means in a doctrinaire way". It was similar in scope to the more ecclectic Folia Slavica , [7] which it would ultimately outcompete along with Russian Linguistics . [8]

It was a specialist publication for Slavic linguists, topics ranging from problems editing early manuscripts to textual criticism of contemporary literature. [9] Languages studied dialectologically included Common Slavic, Late Common Slavic, Slovene, Polish, Ukrainian, Macedonian, Upper Sorbian, and Serbo-Croatian. Languages studied textually included Old Church Slavonic and Russian. [10] The journal was consistently oriented towards historical linguistics. A total of 83 articles appeared in the last 6 volumes, whose contents were analysed by Nedashkivska 2015, who noted 69% of articles focused on linguistics, in addition to 25% on historical linguistics, 18% on syntax, 5% each on morphology, semantics and pragmatics, with only 2 articles each on phonetics and phonology, lexis, comparative linguistics and dialectology, and 1 on second-language acquisition. [11]

It was abstracted and indexed the Bavarian State Library's New Contents Slavistics (German : Inhaltsverzeichnisse slavistischer Zeitschriften) and indexed in its successor Slavistik-Portal  [ de ], [12] It was also abstracted and indexed by Cambridge's Linguistics and Language Behavior Abstracts (LLBA). [13] It is one of the Core Journals indexed by the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign's American Bibliography of Slavic and East European Studies (ABSEES). [14] It is also indexed in Linguistic Bibliography [15] and the MLA Directory of Periodicals. [16]

History

The journal was established in 1958 by Roman Jakobson, Francis J. Whitfield, and Cornelis Hendrik van Schooneveld with the financial assistance of the Harvard University's Committee for the Promotion of Advanced Slavic Cultural Studies. [b] The journal saw "a variety of contributors and theoretical approaches". Alongside Edward Stankiewicz and Christian Stang, [18] Dean Stoddard Worth joined as editor early on, and reained its editor through the last volume. [19] Walter N. Vickery was also an editor at one point. [20] Jakobson has been described as the "moving spirit" behind the journal. [21]

Founded three years after the last volume of Slavic Word and two years after the establishment of the Slavic and East European Journal (SEEJ), the IJSLP was both in chronology and editorial board composition a successor of Slavic Word quickly became a "major forum" for American Slavic linguists, coexisting with the SEEJ. For the first decade, it was an annual publication and one of the dominant journals in American Slavistics, but gradually it fell off in favour of other journals. [22]

Jakobson's personal involvement in the journal's content curation was sometimes a matter of contention. In 1969, when Michael Shapiro published a negative review in Language of a book by one of Jakobson's Harvard students, Jakobson published the student's rebuttal in IJSLP, telephoned to convince the dean of Shapiro's UCLA college to turn him down for tenure when it came up in 1970, and initially refused to publish his counter-rebuttal in the IJSLP. Dean Worth threatened to resign as Managing Editor if it was not published, so Jakobson backed down. [23]

In 1982, it was the oldest of 6 Slavic studies periodicals published in the Netherlands. [24] The volume that year was published as a Festschrift dedicated to Edward Stankiewicz. Upon the death of Jakobson in 1982, a special memorial volume titled Roman Jakobson: What He Taught Us was published as a supplement to volume 27. [25] The 1985 volume was also published as a Festschrift, dedicated to Henrik Birnbaum. [26]

Later on, major irregularities in its publication schedule arose, including a 7 year gap between the 1988 volume and its publication in 1995. [27] The last volume to require physical typesetting was 39–40, published in 1996. [28] After its publication was discontinued, many of its contributors shifted to the Journal of Slavic Linguistics ( ISSN   1543-0391). [29]

Some papers published in early issues are still cited today. Some of these are listed in Bethin 2006. [30]

See also

Notes

  1. Not to be confused with the International Journal of Speech-Language Pathology , which shares the same initialism (IJSLP).
  2. Informally known as the PROM Committee. [17]

References

  1. 1 2 NULBC n.d.
  2. 1 2 HT n.d.
  3. Nedashkivska 2015 , p. 486
  4. Jakobson 1997 , p. 349
  5. Jakobson 1960
  6. Jakobson 1981
  7. Rappaport 2006 , p. 100
  8. Gribble 1995 , p. 236
  9. Townsend 1987 , p. 38
  10. Bethin 2006 , p. 11
  11. Nedashkivska 2015 , p. 490
  12. Keller 1983 , p. 378; BSB n.d.
  13. Townsend 1987 , p. 38
  14. UIUC n.d.
  15. Brill n.d.
  16. MLA n.d.
  17. Baran 2021, p. 99
  18. Kopper 2006 , p. 21; Bethin 2006 , p. 8
  19. Andersen 2016 , p. 269
  20. Townsend 1987 , p. 38
  21. Lunt 1982 , p. 776; Baran 2021 , p. 112; Tripiccione 2024
  22. Kopper 2006 , p. 21
  23. Shapiro 2018 , p. 50
  24. Keller 1983 , p. 378
  25. Halle 1983; Kilby 1983 , p. 916
  26. Bethin 2006 , p. 31
  27. Nedashkivska 2015 , p. 489
  28. Gribble 1995 , p. 226
  29. Bethin 2006 , p. 20
  30. Bethin 2006 , p. 30

Bibliography