Writing for Peer Reviewed Journals: Strategies for getting published

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Routledge, Nov 27, 2012 - Education - 200 pages

It’s not easy getting published, but everyone has to do it. Writing for Peer Reviewed Journals presents an insider’s perspective on the secret business of academic publishing, making explicit many of the dilemmas and struggles faced by all writers, but rarely discussed. Its unique approach is theorised and practical. It offers a set of moves for writing a journal article that is structured and doable but also attends to the identity issues that manifest on the page and in the politics of academic life.

The book comprehensively assists anyone concerned about getting published; whether they are early in their career or moving from a practice base into higher education, or more experienced but still feeling in need of further information. Avoiding a ‘tips and tricks’ approach, which tends to oversimplify what is at stake in getting published, the authors emphasise the production, nurture and sustainability of scholarship through writing – a focus on both the scholar and the text or what they call text work/identity work. The chapters are ordered to develop a systematic approach to the process, including such topics as:

  • The writer
  • The reader
  • What’s the contribution?
  • Beginning work
  • Refining the argument
  • Engaging with reviewers and editors

Writing for Peer Reviewed Journals uses a wide range of multi-disciplinary examples from the writing workshops the authors have run in universities around the world: including the UK, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, Ireland, South Africa, Norway, Sweden, Denmark and the United States. This international approach coupled with theoretically grounded strategies to guide the authoring process ensure that people at all stages of their career are addressed.

This lively book uses a combination of personal stories, student texts, published journal abstracts and excerpts from interviews with journal editors and publishers. Written in an accessible style, one which does not use the patronising ‘you’ of advice books, it offers a collegial approach to a task which is difficult for most scholars, regardless of their years of experience.

 

Contents

Why this book now?
1
1 The writer
13
2 The reader
29
3 Whats the contribution?
51
4 So what? Who cares?
69
5 Beginning work
89
6 Refining the argument
107
7 Engaging with reviewers and editors
127
8 Writing with others
145
9 Living hand to mouse
163
References
181
Index
187
Copyright

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About the author (2012)

Pat Thomson is Professor of Education in the School of Education, University of Nottingham, UK.

Barbara Kamler is Emeritus Professor at Deakin University, Melbourne, Australia.

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