Atlántica y Pacífica
Atlántica y Pacífica is a new peer-reviewed transmedial public humanities journal, based in the Center for Latin American and Caribbean Studies (CLACS) at UC Irvine, and in collaboration with colleagues in Abya Yala and Turtle Island. We want to challenge the notion that Latin America and the Caribbean are a fixed location and move toward a geography of movement and historical currents, to see these as shifting places, as a long history of forced and willful migrations, as inseparable from the bodies of those who still migrate and carry with them their homeland, as a moving territory.
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GESTOS
GESTOS is a multi-lingual journal devoted to critical studies of Spanish, Latin American and US Latino theater. Articles were published in English, Portuguese, and Spanish. Each issue included for main sections: essays, performance reviews of Hispanic texts from around the world , book reviews, and an by then unplished play text by a prominent dramatist from the Hispanic world. GESTOS integrates studies in theory of theater and performance, Latin American, Spanish and US Latino theater by considering a variety of theoretical approaches. Its emphasis is the relationship between theater and other visual and performance practices from the perspective of cultural, theater , and visual studies.
GESTOS published essays and writings by well known international scholars from Argentina, Brazil, Canada, Colombia, Chile, England, France, Germany, Israel, Italy, Mexico, Peru, Poland, Puerto Rico, Spain and Venezuela. GESTOS ceased its publications with the last issue of 2015 (Gestos 60, noviembre 2015). All issues are available in digital and print format. Please request them through gestos@uci.edu
Journal of Pidgin and Creole Languages
The mission of the Journal of Pidgin and Creole Languages is to provide a forum for the scholarly study of pidgins, creoles, and other contact languages, from multi-disciplinary perspectives. We place special emphasis on current research devoted to empiricaldescription, theoretical issues, and the broader implications of the study of pidgins, creoles, and other contact languages for theories of acquisition and change, and for linguistic theory in general. We also encourage contributions that explore the applicationof linguistic research to language planning, education, and social reform, as well as studies that examine the role of pidgins, creoles, and other contact languages in the social life and culture, including the literature, of the communities where such languages are spoken.
Editor: Donald Winford | Editorial Associate: Lara Downing, jpcl@osu.edu
Associate Editor, Book Reviews: Armin Schwegler, aschwegl@uci.edu
JPCL Publisher: John Benjamins