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  1. CTheory

    An international journal of theory, technology and culture; publishing articles, interviews, event-scenes and reviews of key books.

    (Source: journal webpage)

    Joe Milutis - 22.01.2012 - 20:57

  2. POETICA

    An International Journal of Linguistic-Literary Studies.

    POETICA was founded by a group of promising, cosmopolitan scholars in Japan in April 1974. Since then, POETICA has been highly reputed by researchers worldwide as a distinguished academic journal from Japan, covering mainly English linguistics, literature and culture. 

    Published by Yushodo Press Co., Ltd., Tokyo.
    Frequency: Biannual (Spring / Autumn)
    Editor-in-Chief: Toshiyuki Takamiya (Keio University, Tokyo)

    Source: Journal's Website 

    Patricia Tomaszek - 03.02.2012 - 15:32

  3. Yushodo Press

    Since 1974 publisher of POETICA: International Journal of Linguistic-Literary Studies which featured "Concrete Poetry: An International Debate" along with publications by e-lit authors in no #74.

    Patricia Tomaszek - 03.02.2012 - 15:36

  4. Visible Language

    Visible Language has been published continuously since 1967. It began as The Journal of Typographic Research and was published under this title for the first 4 years. The founder and first editor, Dr. Merald Wrolstad, understood that research and scholarly information was essential to the development of communication design and in particular to the development of typography in its support of reading and writing. Understanding the broader implications, he changed the title to Visible Language. In 1987, the journal passed to its second editor Sharon Poggenpohl, who has sought to strengthen the investigation of design research, interdisciplinary thinking and the evolution of digital communication along with its cultural impact.

    Over its lifetime, the journal has published nearly 900 articles. Starting with a narrow focus on typography, the journal has continued to evolve in response to the changing landscape of communication design.

    (Source: Visible Language website)

    Scott Rettberg - 03.02.2012 - 16:08

  5. VLAK

    VLAK is an international curatorial project with a broad focus on contemporary poetics, art, film, philosophy, music, design, science, politics, performance, ecology, and new media.

    VLAK invites contributions that extend our understanding about what is possible; which pose questions about the prevailing attitude of norms; which explore the ramifications of contemporary culture and attempt new critical and creative methods.

    "What is lost in abstraction? What is signified by a long work? By a serial work? What are its limitations? How might multiple voices reflect reality? Infect reality? And how sustain such a work? How does the world enter the work? How is the inside destroyed or transformed into 'another' space? How end a work? How reshape parts of the world, and is that what we aspire to anyway? Are we breathing easier, feeling better, glutted with our 'contemporary practice' digested? Or fiercely unsatisfied, curious, anxious, asking, 'What are tomorrow's questions?'" (Abigail Child, This is Called Moving)

    Eric Dean Rasmussen - 18.03.2012 - 16:47

  6. Badosa

    Its website states that "Badosa.com is devoted to the free spreading of literary unpublished texts in a digital format." It was established in 1995 and publishes work in all literary genres in English, Castellan Spanish and Catalonian.


    Jill Walker Rettberg - 28.03.2012 - 10:54

  7. Verso

    About Verso

    Verso Books is the largest independent, radical publishing house in the English-speaking world, publishing eighty books a year. 

    New Left Books was launched by New Left Review in 1970, and took as its logo the Tatlin Tower—a planned monument to the Third International. Focusing initially on translating works of European political and social theory, economics and philosophy, the list during that decade included Theodor Adorno, Louis Althusser, Walter Benjamin, Lucio Colletti, Henri Lefebvre, Georg Lukács, Ernest Mandel, Herbert Marcuse, Jean-Paul Sartre and Max Weber, as well as major original works by Perry Anderson, Terry Eagleton, Tom Nairn and Raymond Williams. NLB’s list challenged established opinions both in the United States and the Soviet Union, and their respective satellites, as well as providing important critical analyses of China, India and South America. The publishing house was always intended to be far broader in its reach than NLR. An early bestseller was Against Method by Paul Feyeraband. 

    Eric Dean Rasmussen - 18.04.2012 - 11:19

  8. The Chronicle of Higher Education

    Based in Washington, D.C., The Chronicle has more than 70 writers, editors, and international correspondents.

    Online, The Chronicle is published every weekday and is the top destination for news, advice, and jobs for people in academe. The Chronicle's Web site features the complete contents of the latest issue; daily news and advice columns; thousands of current job listings; an archive of previously published content; vibrant discussion forums; and career-building tools such as online CV management, salary databases, and more.

    The Chronicle's audited Web-site traffic is more than 12.8 million pages a month, seen by more than 1.9 million unique visitors.

    In print, The Chronicle is published in two sections: Section A, which contains news and jobs, and The Chronicle Review, a magazine of arts and ideas. Subscribers also receive the annual Almanac of Higher Education and special reports on diversity, the academic workplace, online learning, and other topics.The Chronicle newspaper is available in print and digital formats.

    Eric Dean Rasmussen - 25.04.2012 - 08:47

  9. Sigilo Press

    SIGLIO is an independent press in Los Angeles dedicated to publishing uncommon books that live at the intersections of art and literature.

    Siglio books defy categorization and ignite conversation: they are cross-disciplinary, hybrid works that subvert paradigms, reveal unexpected connections, rethink narrative forms, and thoroughly engage a reader's imagination and intellect. Siglio publishes books without compromise—each title embodies the inimitable vision of its author—and we cultivate wider audiences for original, provocative work, whether by renowned, forgotten, or unknown artists and writers.

    (Source: Sigilo press website, About page)

    Scott Rettberg - 12.06.2012 - 13:20

  10. Inflect

    infLect is a peer-reviewed Australian ejournal which is devoted to creative multimedia work and innovative writing. The journal showcases work which brings together text, visual images and sound into a reciprocal relationship, and also writing which combines critical and creative content.

    infLect has a special interest in encouraging on-the-page writers to adopt electronic and multimedia formats for their work, and to collaborate with artists working in other disciplines.

    infLect is divided into volumes, but work appears continuously as it is received and accepted. At the moment work is selected by invitation only. There are no payments to contributors and they retain copyright, but are required to give a permanent license to infLect.

    The journal is based in the School of Creative Communication, University of Canberra.

    This journal is not-for-profit. Its contents are freely available on the web.

    Deena Larsen - 20.06.2012 - 19:42

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