The editors of American Review of Canadian Studies invite submission of articles in any area of Canadian studies and are receptive to a wide range of methodologies; topical pieces and responses to articles published in previous issues will also be considered.
Submissions should be fifteen to twenty-five double-spaced pages in length, including references, and should be submitted via the following website:
http://mc.manuscriptcentral.com/rarc. When you arrive at that site, about midway down you'll see the sentence “If you do not have an account, please click here to create an account.” Everyone already in our existing list of contacts has been incorporated into the system and given an account that requires only activation and updating (if your contact info has changed). If you think that applies to you, enter your email address in the Password Help field on the log-in page and click “Go”; the system will then send you the password information you need to log in. If, on the other hand, you're new to
ARCS (or your email address has changed), click as instructed to create an account. Once you have an account—whether you created it or reactivated it—you'll be able to log in as a “registered user.” That will take you to a page that invites you to click on “Author Center”; when you do so, an eye-catching blue box will direct you to “Click here to submit a new manuscript”—and the process begins!
In preparation for submitting your manuscript, you'll want to make a version that you're certain does not reveal your identity in either text or notes. Many of our submissions begin their life as papers presented at conferences. The titles of such papers can easily be linked to their authors by anyone using a computer search engine. If your submission falls into that category, please retitle it prior to submission. The anonymity of submitters and reviewers is vital to the journal's health.
Although articles need not have a particular reference style for consideration, the final version of an accepted manuscript will need to be submitted using the author-date system, with in-text citations corresponding to an end-of-article reference list (as outlined in The Chicago Manual of Style, 15th edition, paragraph 16.4). Chapter 17 of The Chicago Manual includes lots of helpful examples. You'll want to follow the examples labeled T (for in-text references) and R (for the reference list).
Inquiries and books for review should be sent to:
Dr. John L. Purdy, Editor
The American Review of Canadian Studies
The Center for Canadian-American Studies
Western Washington University
Bellingham,WA 98225-9110
USA