Early
EMLS: Masthead
Publishing Information, Journal Availability, Contact Addresses
Editorial Group
Submission Information

Publishing Information, Journal Availability, EMLS Contact Addresses

EMLS (ISSN 1201-2459) is published three times a year for the on-line academic community by agreement with the University of British Columbia's English Department, and with the support of the University's Library and Arts Computing Centre.

EMLS does not appear in print form, but can be obtained free of charge, along with Interactive EMLS and EMLS On-Line Resources, in hypertextual format on the World Wide Web at

and by electronic mail subscription by sending a message to

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Editorial Group

The EMLS Editorial Group is representative of the on-line academic community as a whole and includes scholars with wide-ranging interests and experience, from junior to well-established senior academics.


Submission Information

EMLS invites contributions of critical essays on literary topics and of interdisciplinary studies which centre on literature and literary culture in English during the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. Contributions, including critical essays and studies (which must be accompanied by a 250 word abstract), bibliographies, notices, letters to the editor, and other materials, may be submitted to the editor by electronic mail at EMLS@arts.ubc.ca or by regular mail at Early Modern Literary Studies, Department of English, University of British Columbia, #397 - 1873 East Mall, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada, V6T 1Z1; reviews and materials for review may be sent to the associate editor (reviews) at Review_Editor_EMLS@arts.ubc.ca or by regular mail at the same address. Brief hard-copy correspondence may be sent by fax to (604) 822-6906.

Electronic mail submissions are accepted in ASCII format. Regular mail submissions of material on-disk are accepted in ASCII, Wordperfect, or Microsoft Word format; hard-copy submissions must be accompanied by electronic copies, either on-disk or via electronic mail, and will not be returned. All submissions must follow the current Modern Language Association Handbook, in addition to the following conventions used by Early Modern Literary Studies for ASCII text: &ltb&gtbold text</b> is indicated by tags which surround the text that is to appear in bold, likewise with &lti&gtitalicized text</i>, &ltu&gtunderlined text</u>, and &ltsup&gtsuperscript</sup>; superscript is used for note numbers in the text, and notes themselves appear at the end of the document. A document outlining the representation of non-ASCII characters is available on-site or by request.

Materials published in EMLS are © R.G. Siemens (Editor, EMLS).

For more information regarding submission of materials, send a message to Ed_Asst_EMLS@arts.ubc.ca.



© 1996, R.G. Siemens (Editor, EMLS).