As the incoming editorial team for Technology and Culture, we are devoted to increasing the journal's accessibility by producing larger audiences for our research study articles.
We are trying to find submissions that speak to a worldwide audience beyond your topic to help shed light on its significance for scholars working in other subjects. Also important is to suggest how your topic is relevant for today's scholarship. Finally, we would like you to consider how your manuscript would be taught in the class.
In all submissions, we are seeking to see-at a minimum-a conversation of:

- Historiographical context of your case study
- Global relevance
- Broader significance of your case study
These points ought to be made clear in the abstract.

Submission of a manuscript indicates your guarantee that the material has not formerly been published in type or in compound, which the manuscript is not under factor to consider elsewhere.

Manuscripts might be submitted by means of Scholastica, our electronic submission system: technology-and-culture. scholasticahq.com/. You will have to create a user id on Scholastica to continue.) We do decline paper copy submissions. Email submissions will only be accepted if the author is unable to access the Scholastica system.

We can deal with files in any common Mac or Windows word processor format, however World Files are preferred. Please do not send out a PDF file. Articles are chosen by double-blind peer evaluation. The only location your name need to appear is on a different title page; please make sure to get rid of any self-referencing footnotes too. If your identity is apparent from the manuscript, it can not be sent for review.
Length, format, and design: We have a word limitation of 7,500 words (without footnotes) per post, with a maximum of 100 footnotes. Footnotes need to not be discursive: if the information technology is necessary, put it in the text! We have a limitation of six illustrations and or tables. Please submit your illustrations as specific files, do not embed them in the text however upload them on Scholastica as individual files. If you feel that you require to surpass among these limitations considerably, please seek advice from the managing editor ([email protected]). Ensure, nevertheless, that the manuscript file has callouts suggesting where each figure ought to be positioned.
Please utilize a standard font style (e.g., Arial, Times New Roman) in a standard size (12 point). Use very little formatting. Double space everything, consisting of block quotations, notes, and figure captions, and leave appropriate margins. Do not embed illustrations or tables in the text; send them as separate files rather. For notes, we use the Chicago Manual of Style's footnotes-bibliography design.





