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#1 | |
Member
Join Date: Jun 2012
Location: USA
Posts: 1,492
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"Scholary journal/magazine" etc may not quote from Wikpedia but on the other hand the average person will never read that "scholary journal/magazine" so your information will just be available to a handful of acedamics, this is satisfactory to some people but if you actually want people to read and learn from what you have researched then sometimes compromises are needed. Some subjects can not really be peer reviewed, if no acedemic has any real knowledge of a certain subject and it has not been researched and published already what will they base their review on. Here is an example, my Wikipedia article on Japanese karuta armor is the only one like it in the world, no book or article explains it better and it is available for anyone to see and use. It provides all the basic information, references and images needed to understand what karuta armor is. If this was published in a "Scholary journal/magazine" no one would see it except a handful of uninterested academics. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Karuta_(armour) For the more scholary types academia.edu may be of interest. https://www.academia.edu/about |
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#2 |
Member
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: Ann Arbor, MI
Posts: 5,503
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Thanks for all your input!
The problem is that our community is so small, that no respectable publisher will invest into a peer-reviewed journal that has no chance of a decent profit. I recently published a paper on the origin of islamic saber in a Ukrainian journal published by a crazy guy who opened his private collection to the public and managed to corral a bunch of the top-class academicians to the Editorial Board of a journal he funded by himself:-) He died suddenly and his friends rapidly put together a memorial issue in his honor, myself included. To have a paper in the same issue with Gorelik and Khudyakov is not something that happens every day:-) But such astonishing people are few and far between. Real academic weapon researchers publish books, not articles: that's where the money is. So I am stuck... |
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#3 | |
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Join Date: Oct 2007
Posts: 2,818
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I must ask, with the above statement, is it publishing you want or money and fame? Gavin |
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#4 | |
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Join Date: Jun 2012
Location: USA
Posts: 1,492
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#5 |
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Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: Ann Arbor, MI
Posts: 5,503
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You are right: that was contributed more out of respect than of vanity:-)
No, I do not seek any financial gains. Having published quite a lot in my field in academic journals, I have never received a penny. On the contrary, I had to pay publication charges. Believe me, I know the rules of the game:-) Perhaps, I was misunderstood. Even book authors do not get their money and effort back. The publishers obviously do: they are in a business mode and calculate how many individual buyers and libraries would get the book. What I am talking about is that there is no academically-oriented journal dedicated to the field and providing a soapbox for the individual researchers. It can easily be profitable, because of university libraries that are almost obligated to subscribe and individual subscriptions. The journals routinely charge publication fees. They are not a feeding trough, but a modest revenue source for the publisher. If anybody has connections in the publishing world, desire and time, it might be reasonably realistic to establish one. And that would be a great service for the entire community and the field of historic arms research as well as a focus of academic endeavours. |
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#6 | |
Member
Join Date: Mar 2012
Posts: 422
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But your "no" is excessive - there are journals (and you named two yourself: Gladius and Arms & Armour). Not many - I can only think of, in addition to your two, Waffen- und Kostümkunde, Journal of the Arms & Armour Society, and Journal of the Society of Archer-Antiquaries (even more specialised!). There was Journal of the Armour Research Society, but AFAIK, it didn't survive. But you don't need a dedicated journal; relevant papers appear in archaeology, ethnography, history, military history, art history, and metallurgy journals. The solution to the wide-readership problem mentioned above is to publish in a journal that lets you retain copyright or at least the right to post an eprint online (preferably on 3rd-party servers, rather than just your own or your employer's server). |
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#7 |
Member
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: Ann Arbor, MI
Posts: 5,503
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Thanks for the ideas.
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