PJA Submissions
The
PJA is published three times annually, in April, August and December. Essays are invited from postgraduate students on any topic in aesthetics. Essays are meant to be kept short, aiming at roughly 3000 words. For that reason, authors would be advised to write concise, to-the-point essays, with clearly stated aims and tightly controlled arguments. Discussion pieces are welcome. The philosophical level of essays should be such as to encourage serious and focused academic thought at a level appropriate to postgraduates' topics of interest. Authors are asked to avoid lengthy footnotes. Source materials should be collected at the end of the essay. As this will be an entirely web-based format, essays should be submitted via email. To avoid difficulties with word processing formats all emailed essays
must be saved and sent in Rich Text Format (.rtf). Essays in an acceptable format will be refereed blind by a member of the editorial advisory board.
Please direct all submissions and editorial questions to the editor at:
pgjeditor@british-aesthetics.org --
The PJA invites contributions from postgraduate students
for its Spring/April 2010 issue (vol. 7 no. 1).
Submissions may be on any topic in aesthetics and the
philosophy art. The PJA welcomes papers from diverse perspectives (including
analytic, continental and historical ones). Submissions should be accessible, concise
and have recognisably philosophical content. They should be roughly 3,000 words
in length, but not longer than 3,500. On issues of formatting (referencing style, etc.) authors should refer to
the current issue of the journal at:
http://www.british-aesthetics.org/pjacurrent.aspx
Papers to be considered for this issue should be
submitted by April 1st 2010 in Rich
Text Format (.rtf) via email to
pgjeditor@british-aesthetics.org with 'PJA Submission' in the subject line. Submissions
will be refereed blind by a member of the editorial board.
The PJA is pleased to
announce that this issue will feature an invited contribution, “Aesthetic Relativism”,
by Dr. Derek Matravers (Cambridge/OU).