Submissions

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Submission Preparation Checklist

As part of the submission process, authors are required to check off their submission's compliance with all of the following items, and submissions may be returned to authors that do not adhere to these guidelines.
  • The submission has not been previously published, nor is it before another journal for consideration (or an explanation has been provided in Comments to the Editor).
  • The submission file is in OpenOffice, Microsoft Word, or RTF document file format.
  • Where available, URLs for the references have been provided.
  • The text adheres to the stylistic and bibliographic requirements outlined in the Author Guidelines.
  • The text is single-spaced; uses a 12-point font; employs italics, rather than underlining (except with URL addresses); and all illustrations, figures, and tables are placed within the text at the appropriate points, rather than at the end.

Author Guidelines

Guidelines for authors

GUIDELINES FOR THE PUBLICATION OF ARTICLES

1. General Instructions

- The call for papers for publication in the journal is permanently open. Therefore, original articles can be submitted at any time of the year.

- The article should be sent in electronic format as a Word or compatible document to the following address: scriptamediaevalia@ffyl.uncu.edu.ar with copy to ceferino.munoz@ffyl.uncu.edu.ar.

Receipt of all texts will be confirmed by e-mail.

- All articles will be sent for evaluation to two blind peers. The decision will be communicated to the authors within two months of receipt.

- Languages: Articles can be written in English, French, Italian, Spanish, Portuguese or German.

- The editor does not perform linguistic revisions. Therefore, manuscripts must be written correctly in each language.

- The text should be written in font 12 (Times New Roman), 1.5 line spacing and 2.5 margins. Paragraphs should be indented 0.5 on the first line. Notes should be written in font 10, 1 line spacing, without indentation.

- Each article should begin with the title (in Normal style, bold and centered), with the author's name. E.g.:

Pulchrum: origen y originalidad del ‘quae visa placent’ en Santo Tomás de Aquino

Hugo Costarelli Brandi*

- At the beginning of the article, the author's name with his degree, academic affiliation and e-mail address should be included in a footnote with an asterisk.

E.g.: * Hugo Costarelli Brandi is Doctor in Philosophy and Associate Professor of Aesthetics at the Faculty of Philosophy and Letters of the Universidad Nacional de Cuyo. hugocb@ffyl.uncu.edu.ar

- The title should be followed by a summary of the article (index of subtitles and parts), an abstract of between 100 and 200 words and up to 5 keywords. All the elements mentioned, except the summary, must be written in Spanish and English.

- At the end of the article, all works cited in the article should be listed in alphabetical order under the heading Bibliographical References. If there is more than one work by the same author, the author's name should be repeated in all cases.

2. Citation Norms

Scripta Mediaevalia publishes studies on medieval thought, whose disciplinary field belongs to the human sciences (philosophy, literature, history, etc.). In this sense, the reference format adopted for its contributions corresponds to the "footnote and bibliography system" established by the Chicago Manual of Style, with the slight modification that medieval authors, such as Thomas Aquinas, Albertus Magnus, Egidius Romano, etc., are cited in their full name in all footnote references. The document's own formalities are detailed in the provisions stipulated below. The following website can also be consulted: http://www.chicagomanualofstyle.org/tools_citationguide.html

- All direct quotations must be written between quotation marks.

- Longer quotations in the body of the text should be presented in a separate paragraph, in font 10, single spaced, paragraph indentation to the left of 1.5 and without quotation marks.

- Footnotes should be automatically numbered as footnotes.

- Footnote numbers should be placed after the punctuation marks. E.g.: "Deus est quo nihil melius ecogitari possit".1

- Italics may be used in short Latin or other language expressions, or in book titles. It may also be used to emphasize a word written in the language of the article.

- No other graphic signs other than italics, such as boldface, capitalized words, etc., should be used.

- The use of typical abbreviations in humanistic studies is allowed, preferably in their Latin form: f./ff. (folium, folia), v. (verso), r. (recto), c. (circa), lib. (liber), q. (quaestio), d. (distinctio), a. (articulum), sol. (solutio), vd. (vide), cfr.

- The use of op. cit. or p./pp. is not allowed.

- If a special type of font is used (Greek, Hebrew, Arabic, Cyrillic, or transliterations with special characters), the file of the font used must be sent.

- The text should be sent ready to print. Authors of selected papers will receive the galley proofs in PDF format for review. For technical reasons, substantial or lengthy changes will not be allowed.

3. Footnotes and bibliography system

Footnotes and bibliography system

This system is extremely flexible, since, apart from opening a space in some documents to cite certain types of unusual sources, it allows commenting on the sources cited. Notes are numbered with superscripts in the body of the text and these have their corresponding footnotes (in Microsoft Word there is a tool that allows footnotes to be included as the text is being drafted).[1]

All titles cited and included in footnotes should appear in the "Bibliography" section at the end of the work. When a reference is footnoted, the complete details are only registered in the first citation. Multiple citations of the same source, after the first one, are arranged in short form. The structure of each reference should conform to the following models:

3.1. Books by a single author

Full citation in a note (N)[2]

First name Last name, Title: Subtitle (City: Publisher, year), page(s) consulted.

The abbreviations p. or pp. are not used to indicate pages; only the page number or range is included.

1 Hernando Téllez, Nadar contra la corriente: escritos sobre literatura (Bogotá: Ariel, 1995), 165.

2 Universidad de los Andes, Calidad del recurso hídrico de Bogotá (2009-2010) (Bogotá: Universidad de los Andes, 2011), 141.

Abbreviated citation in a note (NA).

The purpose of short citations is to reduce the volume of material documented in a paper. The short form includes enough data so that readers can find the complete information in the section titled "Bibliography."

The most common structure of the short form consists of the author's last name and the main title of the work cited (abbreviated, if it has more than four words).

Last name, abbreviated title, pages consulted.

No more than four words from the title.

The abbreviations p. or pp. are not used to indicate pages; only the page number or range is included.

3 Téllez, Nadar contra la corriente, 364.

4 Universidad de los Andes, Calidad del recurso hídrico, 141.

Bibliography entry (B)

Last name, First name. Title: Subtitle. City: Publisher, year.

Téllez, Hernando. Nadar contra la corriente: escritos sobre literatura. Bogotá: Ariel, 1995.

Universidad de los Andes. Calidad del recurso hídrico de Bogotá (2009-2010). Bogotá: Universidad de los Andes, 2011.

3.2. Books by two or three authors

N

Name Surname and First Name Surname, Title: Subtitle (City: Publisher, year), pages consulted.

5 Rocío Londoño y Gabriel Restrepo, Diez historias de vida (Bogotá: Fundación Social, 1995), 12.

NA

Surname and Last Name, Title abbreviated, pages consulted.

6 Londoño y Restrepo, Diez historias de vida, 364.

B

Last Name, First Name, First Name Last Name and First Name Last Name. Title: Subtitle. City: Publisher, year.

Londoño, Rocío y Gabriel Restrepo. Diez historias de vida. Bogotá: Fundación Social, 1995.

3.3. Books by four of more authors

 

If a book has four or more authors, all of them should be listed in the corresponding entry in the bibliography. The structure is the same as in the entry for two or three authors.

In the note, however, the name of the first author of the book followed by et al. should be cited.

N

Name Last name et al., Title: Subtitle (City: Publisher, year), pages consulted.

7 María Quijano et al., Educación de historia a finales del siglo i (Caracas: Cedro, 1995), 12.

NA

Surname et al., Title abbreviated, pages consulted.

8 Quijano et al., Educación de historia, 364.

B

Last Name, First Name, First Name Last Name, First Name Last Name and First Name Last Name. Title: Subtitle. City: Publisher, year.

Quijano, María, Susana Pérez, Julia Tuñón, Sergio Álvarez y Sergio Villarreal. Educación de historia a finales del siglo i. Caracas: Cedro, 1995.

3.4. Book Chapters

N

Name Last name, "Title of chapter. Subtitle of the chapter", in Title: Subtitle, edited by Nombre Apellido (City: Editorial, year), pages consulted.

Chapter titles are always enclosed in quotation marks.

It is always indicated after the title of the book who is responsible for its edition.

9 Felipe Fernández, “La guerra naval en la era vikinga”, in Historia de la guerra en la Edad Media, editado por Maurice Keen (México: Océano, 2005), 297.

NA

Last name, "Title (abbreviated) of chapter," pages consulted.

No more than four words of the title.

10 Fernández, “Guerra naval”, 295.

B

Last name, First name. "Chapter Title: Chapter Subtitle: Chapter Subtitle," in Title: Subtitle, edited by First Name Last Name, page range. City: Publisher, year.

The abbreviation pp is not used; only page numbers are given.

Fernández, Felipe. “La guerra naval en la era vikinga”, in Historia de la guerra en la Edad Media, editado por Maurice Keen, 295- 321. México: Océano, 2005.

3.5. Introductions, prefaces or presentations

If it is a generic title–such as "Introduction", "Preface" or "Presentation"–and the author is the same as the author of the complete document, that term is added before the title of the book.

N

First name Last name, Introduction/Preface/Presentation to Title: Subtitle (City: Publisher, year), pages consulted.

11 Harding, Sandra. Preface to The science question in feminism (Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1986), 12.

NA

Last name, Introduction/Foreword/Preface/Introduction to Title (abridged), pages consulted.

No more than four words from title.

12 Harding, Preface to The science question, 9.

B

Last name, First name. Introduction/Foreword/Preface/Presentation to Title: Subtitle, page range. City: Publisher, year.

Harding, Sandra. Preface to The science question in feminism, 9-14. Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1986.

If the author of the introduction, preface, or presentation is different from the main author of the text, the former appears before the title of the book, and the author of the latter after it:

N

Name Surname, Introduction/Preface/Presentation to Title: Subtitle, from Name Surname (City: Publisher, year), pages consulted.

Details of the author of the introduction, preface or presentation.

Details of the author of the book.

13 Adolfo Meisel Roca, Introduction to El Caribe colombiano, from Gustavo Bell (Barranquilla: Universidad del Norte, 1988), 8.

NA

Last name, Introduction/Foreword/Preface/Introduction to Title (abridged), pages consulted.

No more than four words from the title.

14 Meisel Roca, Preface to El Caribe colombiano, 9.

B

Last Name, First Name, Introduction/Preface/Presentation to Title: Subtitle, from First Name Last Name, page range. City: Publisher, year.

Details of the author of the introduction, preface or presentation.

Details of the author of the book.

Meisel Roca, Adolfo. Introduction to Gustavo Bell's El Caribe colombiano, 7-11. Barranquilla: Universidad del Norte, 1988.

3.6. Articles in academic journals

N

Name Name, "Title of the article: Subtitle of the article". Title of the journal volume, number (year): pages consulted.

Neither the word "volume" nor the abbreviation "vol." is used; when present, the volume should be indicated in Arabic numerals.

The abbreviations "p." or "pp." should not be used to indicate the pages consulted.

15 Ángela Uribe, “El lugar de la persuasión en sociedades degradadas: Sobre Albert Speer”. Revista de Estudios Sociales nº 44 (2012): 139.

NA

Last name, "Title (summarized) of the article," pages consulted.

16 Uribe, “El lugar de la persuasión”, 139.

B

Last name, First name. "Title of the article: Subtitle of the article". Title of the journal volume, number (year): page range.

Neither the word "volume" nor the abbreviation "vol." is used; when there is one, the volume should be indicated in Arabic numerals.

Uribe, Ángela. "The Place of Persuasion in Degraded Societies: On Albert Speer." Journal of Social Studies no. 44 (2012): 137-144.

3.7. Online academic journal articles.

N

First name Last name, "Title of the article: Subtitle of the article". Journal title volume, issue no. (year): pages consulted, url.

Neither the word "volume" nor the abbreviation "vol." is used; when present, the volume should be indicated in Arabic numerals.

The abbreviations "p." or "pp." should not be used to indicate the pages consulted.

17 Francisco Pazzarelli, “Un queso entre otros: Sueros, familias y relaciones en los cerros jujeños”. Revista Colombiana de Antropología 50, n.º 2 (2014): 98, http://kt.micrositios.net/action. php?kt_path_info=ktcore.actions.document.view&fDocumentI- d=18411&forceopen.

NA

Last name, "Title (abbreviated) of article," pages consulted.

18 Pazzarelli, “Un queso entre otros”, 100.

B

Last name, First name. "Title of the article: Subtitle of the article". Journal title volume, no. number (year): page range, url.

Neither the word "volume" nor the abbreviation "vol." is used; when present, the volume should be indicated in Arabic numerals.

Pazzarelli, Francisco, "Un queso entre otros: Sueros, familias y relaciones en los cerros jujeños." Revista Colombiana de Antropología 50, no. 2 (2014): 95-118, http://kt.micrositios.net/action.php?kt_path_ info=ktcore.actions.document.view&fDocumentId=18411&

3.8. Press articles (authored or un-authored)

Although the Chicago Manual suggests that it is not necessary to include this type of source in the bibliography and, consequently, does not offer examples of abbreviated notes in these cases, the respective models are included here for those who prefer to do so.

If the author's name is known, it should be cited as follows:

N

Name Last name, "Title of the article: Subtitle of the article", Title of the periodical, day month year, page(s)/url.

19 Ricardo Gálvez, “Obesidad: La pandemia del siglo i en Latinoamérica”, El Espectador, 1.º de septiembre del 2012, 14, http:// www.elespectador.com/noticias/salud/articulo-378403-obesi- dad-pandemia-del-siglo-i.

NA

Last name, "Title (summarized) of the article," pages consulted.

20 Gálvez, “Obesidad”, 14.

B

Last name, First name. "Title of the article: Subtitle of the article". Title of periodical, day month year, page(s)/url.

Gálvez, Ricardo. "Obesidad: La pandemia del siglo i en Latinoamérica" (Obesity: The pandemic of the first century in Latin America). El Espectador, September 1, 2012, 14, http:// http:// www.elespectador.com/noticias/salud/articulo-378403-obesi- dad-pandemia-del-siglo-i.

If the author is not known, it will be cited as follows:

N

"Title of article: article subtitle", Title of periodical, day month year, page(s)/url.

21 “Aprenda usted a vivir: nuestro enemigo cada día”, El Correo, 22 de enero de 1966, 12.

NA

Last name, "Title (abbreviated) of article," pages consulted.

22 “Aprenda usted a vivir”, 12.

B

"Title of article: Subtitle of article". Periodical title, day month year, page(s)/url.

"Aprenda usted a vivir: nuestro enemigo cada día," El Correo, January 22, 1966, 12.

3.9. Theses and other unpublished documents

N

First name Last name, "Title of thesis" (master's/doctoral thesis, Institution/Event, year), pages consulted, e-mail address.

The abbreviations "p." or "pp." should not be used to indicate the pages consulted.

23 Martha Bermúdez, “Sinergia y aprendizaje. Un modelo escolar de contacto entre grupos y aprendizaje a través del servicio” (tesis de maestría, Universidad de los Andes, 2009), 15.

NA

Last name, "Title (abbreviated) of the thesis," pages consulted.

24 Bermúdez, “Sinergia y aprendizaje”, 20.

B

Last name, First name. "Title of thesis", master's/doctoral thesis, Institution/Event, year, e-mail address.

Bermudez, Martha, "Synergy and learning. Un modelo escolar de contacto entre grupos y aprendizaje a través del servicio", Master's thesis, Universidad de los Andes, 2009.

3.10. Interviews and personal communications

Whatever the medium of the interviews or personal communications -radio, audiovisual, face-to-face, online or telephone-, the quote will begin with the name of the person interviewed or the person from whom the communication was received. The interviewer or addressee, if mentioned, will appear afterwards.

It is not recommended that unpublished interviews be included in the bibliography; in these cases, the mere use of a footnote is preferred:

N

25 Amalia Torres (profesora del Gimnasio Moderno), entrevistada por Cristina Cruz, 20 de noviembre del 2010.

26 Gilles Lipovetsky, La era del vacío no ha terminado, entrevista de radio, 13 de mayo del 2004, http://youtube/eiu13gIu-Bs.

27 Francisco Samper, correo electrónico al autor, 17 de abril del 2002.

3.11. Internet pages

A virtual site is a collection of documents (pages) of an individual or an organization, available at a specific location on the world wide web.

N

"Title of the page", Title of the virtual site, last modification day month year, access day month year, url.

25 “Objetivos del Milenio”, Programa de las Naciones Unidas para el Desarrollo en Colombia, acceso el 21 de mayo del 2015, http:// www.co.undp.org/content/colombia/es/home/mdgoverview/.

NA

"Title (summary) of the page."

No more than four words of the title.

26 “Objetivos del Milenio”.

B

"Page title". Title of the virtual site, last modification day month year, url.

"Millennium Development Goals". United Nations Development Program in Colombia, http://www.co.undp.org/content/colom- bia/en/home/mdgoverview/.

3.12. Blogs

A blog has fewer components than a virtual site, but includes posts and comments. The citation models for blogs and blogs are as follows:

N

First name Last name (or Pseudonym), "Title of the entry or comment", Name of the blog (blog), day month year, url.

27 Tito Torres, “Ejercicios de ortografía para 10º”, My Favorite Thing (blog). 13 de abril de 2011, http://tiflaz.blogspot.com/2011/03/ ejercicios-de-ortografia-para-10.html.

NA

Last name, "Title (summary) of entry or comment," pages consulted.

28 Torres, “Ejercicios de ortografía”.

B

Last Name, First Name (or Pseudonym). "Title of the entry or comment". Name of blog (blog), day month year, url.

Torres, Tito. "Spelling exercises for 10th grade". My Favorite Thing (blog), April 13, 2011, http://tiflaz.blogspot.com/2011/03/ ejercicios-de-ortografia-para-10.html.

3.13. Legal documents

For legal documents, whether laws, resolutions, decrees, treaties, among others, it is recommended to cite the full name of the document and indicate the exact date it was issued.

29 Convención Marco de las Naciones Unidas sobre el Cambio Climático, 14 de enero del 2009.

30 Ley 233 de 1995, 26 de diciembre. Boletín oficial 42.162.

3.14. Use of ibid.

Ibid. is the abbreviated form of ibidem (Latin for "right there"). It usually refers to the same work that has just been cited. It is never used in a note containing more than one reference. Examples:

31 Pedraza, “Educación de las mujeres”, 12.

32 Ibid., 13-14.

33 Ibid., 12.

34 Fernández, “Guerra naval”, 295.

35 Ibid., 296.

Nota bene: According to the Chicago Manual of Style, references do not use the expression op. cit. as it is considered inappropriate to return to a reference already mentioned in the document.

3.15. Editions

If a reference edition is used that was not the first edition of the book, the edition number should be placed after the title, as follows:

Téllez, Hernando. Nadar contra la corriente: escritos sobre literatura. Bogota: Ariel, 1995.

4. Bibliography

4.1. Organization: references cited should be included in alphabetical order according to the authors' surnames, with French indentation. If a cited work does not have an author, it is placed alphabetically according to the title of the document, without considering the articles ("los", "la", "el", "un", etc.).

[1] The rules have been extracted from: Margarita Perez et al, Manual of citations and bibliographic references: Latino, APA, Chicago, IEEE, MLA, Vancouver. 2nd ed. (Bogotá: Ediciones Uniandes, 2015), 33-47.

[2] N is used here to indicate the complete reference in a note, NA for the abbreviated note and B for the bibliography.

Book Reviews

Scripta Mediaevalia publishes, in each issue, a selection of notes, reviews and bibliographical comments on books received by the editorial office.
Reviews of books published up to three years before the current year, on subjects related to medieval thought, may also be sent.

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