ISSN 1510-5024 printed version
ISSN 2301-1629 online version |
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Author Guidelines
Guidelines for contributing authors: Humanidades: revista de la Universidad de
Montevideo is
a journal of Philosophy, History and Literature, published every six months
(June and December of each year) by the Facultad de Humanidades y Ciencias de
la Educación de la Universidad de Montevideo. Commitment to the editor and copyright: Only original content that is not committed
to another publication and whose author(s) are in full possession of publishing
rights will be published. The submission of the originals to the editor entails
that the author or the authors of the collaborations give to Humanidades: revista de la
Universidad de Montevideo the reproduction rights of the
admitted texts. In turn, cases of co-authorship must be expressly stated, as
well as cases in which the author received collaborations, suggestions or
comments from third parties. Notice of copyright: This Journal is published by the Facultad de
Humanidades y Ciencias de la Educación of the Universidad de Montevideo. The authors who publish in this journal
accept the following terms: The authors retain the copyright and grant
the journal the right of first publication of the work under a Creative Commons
Attribution 4.0 International license, which allows others to
share the work with an acknowledgment of authorship and an acknowledgment of
their initial publication in this journal. Authors are allowed and encouraged
to publish their work online (in repositories or on their website) after the
presentation of this issue of Humanidades,
as this can generate productive exchanges, as well as a higher citation of the
published work (see “The Effect of Open Access”). Privacy statement: The names and email addresses entered in
this journal will be used exclusively for the purposes stated by the journal
and will not be available for any other purpose or another person. Arbitration system: Texts sent by the contributors to the
journal of Humanidades –without
the authorship data– are received by the associate editor, in charge of
verifying compliance with the established criteria and standards. If in this
first stage of the review process any doubt shall arise, the text is referred
to the Editorial Board; which definitively decides about the consultation and
communicates the resolution to the associate editor. If a text does not meet
the required standards or does not receive approval in any of the stages of the
process, the associate editor transfers the decision to the author or authors
in the shortest time possible. The text approved in the first stage goes to
anonymous and confidential arbitration –double blind method–, in charge of
external evaluators that must be a mínimum of two. They will evaluate the
scientific and methodological quality of the text that can be object of
acceptance, rejection or acceptance with modifications. In the latter case, the
associate editor resends the text with the modifications to the author, who can
admit the modifications or substantiate a partial discrepancy. When the
associate editor receives the text again, he verifies that the modifications
suggested by the evaluators have been made or he accepts the discrepancy of the
author. It is the associate editor that must confirm if the text goes to the
last stage of the process or not, before being incorporated into the intended
issue of the journal. The final decision is communicated to the author within a
maximum period of eight months from the date of receipt of the text. The
associate editor may consider, in some cases, the appropriateness for an
evaluator to have an extraordinary time to complete the analysis of the text. If a notorious discrepancy appears between
the evaluators, the associate editor is entitled to request a new evaluation on
equal terms with the first two; this third evaluation will define the judgment
on the text. All the evaluators are committed to observe
the accepted ethical and scientific research norms of universal character. The
journal may specify them in a timely manner. Once the article is approved for
publication, the author must sign and send the Declaration of Originality of
the writing. When the issue is published, the authors
receive a copy of the corresponding issue of the Humanidades journal. Ethical codes and conflicts of interest: Humanidades adheres to the
international standards and codes of ethics established by the Committee on
Publication Ethics, COPE (Guidelines on
Good Publication Practice and Code of Conduct). Authors, editors,
reviewers and editorial staff agree to read and accept the present Code of Ethics of the journal. The authors acknowledge all sources of
funding used in their work and expressly indicate, when appropriate, the
funding agency and any other commercial, financial or private link with persons
or institutions that may have interests with the proposed work. Sending the originals: Written texts will be accepted in
the following languages: Spanish, English and Portuguese. The journal is composed of 4
sections: Studies, Articles, Reviews and Interview. Contributions to the two main
sections of the journal should be submitted in three separate files. File 1 contains
only the title with the body of the text and the critical apparatus; file 2
contains: the title of the text submitted and the details of the author(s)
(full name, position and academic institution to which they belong, e-mail
address, unique ORCID researcher identifier, percentage contribution of the
author(s) to the research); and file 3 contains the signed letter of
originality. The author must avoid allusions to his/her own authorship when
referencing the work and his/her name cannot appear in the entire length of
file 1. The message accompanying the files must specify the section to which
the text is addressed (Studies or Articles). The contents submitted to
arbitration will be those of the following sections: Studies and Articles. The books’ reviews and the
prologue of the studies will have a quality assessment performed by the
Editorial Board. The name of the author (or
authors) of the submitted texts must not appear in the file or in the copy sent
for evaluation. In the cases that the texts sent have graphics or images, they
will be sent in a separate file in high resolution (jpg format). The Studies section
will be composed of a maximum of 4 writings on a subject announced in the
publication of the previous issue of the journal, or through other academic
media. The works presented for the Studies section should include: 1) Short curriculum vitae of the
author (maximum of 6 lines), including:
2) Title of the work in English,
Spanish and Portuguese. 3) The text of the work must have
between 8,000 and 15,000 words. 4) Summary of a maximum of 200
words, in English, Spanish and Portuguese (Abstract). 5) Key words (up to 6), in
English, Spanish and Portuguese. 6) Bibliography at the end of the
text presented in accordance with the citation norms of the journal. The journal may also include
texts in the Articles section that will relate or not to their
areas of study. The works submitted for the
Articles section must attach: 1) Short curriculum vitae of the
author (maximum of 6 lines), including:
2) Title of the work in English,
Spanish and Portuguese. 3) The text of the work must have
between 6,000 and 10,000 words. 4) Summary of a maximum of 200
words, in English, Spanish and Portuguese (Abstract). 5) Key words (up to 6), in
English, Spanish and Portuguese. 6) Bibliography at the end of the
text presented in accordance with the citation norms of the journal. The Reviews section
may include notes on books of interest in the areas of study of the journal.
The submitted works must have all the bibliographic information of the reviewed
book (title, author, city, publisher, year and number of pages) and shall not
exceed 2,000 words. A short curriculum vitae of the author (maximum of 6 lines)
must be attached, including:
Deadline for receipt of originals: for the June issue, until 1
November of the previous year; for the December issue, until 30 April of the
current year. General style rules: The journal adopts the norms
approved by the Real Academia Española in its Libro de estilo de la
lengua española (2018), for everything related to grammar rules,
spelling, etc. and the explanation on the intellectual work of the Manual
de estilo de la lengua española of José Martínez de Sousa, Ediciones
Trea, S.L., 2012. The quotes are used in this
order: It opens and closes with the
Latin quotation marks («»); if within this quotation it is necessary to use new
quotes, it opens and closes with the English quotation marks (""); if
within these it is necessary to open a new type of quotes, the simple or simple
ones are used (''). In the case of textual citations
they should appear inserted within the paragraph when they are short quotations
that do not exceed six lines, in Latin quotation marks («»). If they are more
extensive, it is recommended to place them, without quotation marks, in a
separate paragraph, in a body smaller than the general text, respecting a
larger indentation, example: Cuando se le preguntó si sabía o
le constaba que la María Josefa hubiera dado algunos fundamentos graves que
afectaran la honra y crédito de Rivas, sostuvo:
[...] es publico conocimiento y notoria en todo aquel barrio su
sucepcion,
honestidad, y buen proceder, y que solo si pocos dias antes el propio
rivas le
havia comentado al que declara como un moso que esta en su esquina
llamado
francisco blanco se la havia pedido para casarse con ella, al que le
respondio
que si que era gustoso en eyo
que se esperase que viniese su muger
que
entonces se havia de ejecutar, y que dicho moso lo havia encargado el
secreto,
y es bueno que me encarga el secreto, y se a valido de una muger del
barrio
que es Doña Ana de la Solla para que le grangee la voluntad a la muchacha
pues sabremos como ha de ser este casamiento y discurre el declarante que
de
aqui a nacido el encono de dicho Rivas [...] en venganza de no haber
querido
consentir en su animo torpe que el tenia. 38 The note call is always placed
after the punctuation mark, whatever it is, with the exception of the hyphen,
which it precedes. Bold and underlined will not be
used in bibliographical references. The journal Humanidades has
a style editor and reserves the right to make modifications, in case of
disagreement with the author, the criterion of the journal will prevail. Works that do not respect the
standards for the journal's collaborators will not be published. Formal norms of quoted text: The bibliographical references of
the texts sent to Humanidades: revista de la Universidad de
Montevideo must comply with the standards of the Chicago Style
Manual, in
order to be presented to the evaluation process. The style taken will be the
one of Humanities: footnotes and a bibliography at the end of the text.
References to the sources cited are written in the Roman alphabet and are
listed in a separate paragraph in alphabetical order under the heading Bibliographical
references at the end of the paper. To quote a book: Footnote: Name and surname(s) of
the author, Title of the work in italics (place of publication: publisher,
year), page(s) from where the citation is taken. The first indentation line
must be respected. Bibliography (in alphabetical
order): Surname(s), Name or names. Title of the book in italics. Place of
publication: editorial, year. The hanging indent must be respected. Examples: Footnotes:
Shortened note: Applies to the second and
subsequent citations of a work.
Bibliography (in alphabetical
order): Amores Carredano, Juan B.,
coord. Historia de América. Barcelona: Ariel, 2006. Bernand, Carmen, y Serge
Gruzinski. Historia del Nuevo Mundo: del descubrimiento a la conquista:
la experiencia europea 1492-1550. México: Fondo de Cultura Económica, 1991. Freud, Sigmund, y Lou
Andreas-Salome. Letters. Editado por E. Pfeiffer. New York-London:
Norton, 1983. Herman, Arthur. La idea
de decadencia en la Historia Occidental. Traducido por Carlos Gardini
Barcelona: Andrés Bello, 1998. Originalmente publicado como The Idea of
Decline in Western History. New York: Simon and Shuster, 1997. James, Henry. The
complete tales of Henry James. Edited by Leon Edel. 12 vols. London: Rupert
Hart-Davis, 1962-64. When citing books with more than
three authors, the footnotes should include the name of the first author
followed by “et al.” All authors are included in the bibliography. To quote a chapter or a part of a
book: The parts of a book such as
chapters, conference papers, prologues, etc. should be quoted as follows: Footnotes: Name and surname(s) of
the author(s) of the cited part, “Title of the part in quotation marks”, in
Title of the work in italics, editors (place of publication: publisher, year),
page(s). Bibliography in alphabetical
order: Surname, name(s) of the author(s) of the cited part. “Title of the part
in quotation marks”. In Title of the work in italics, editors. Page(s). Place
of publication: editorial, year. In the notes, mention the
specific pages. In the bibliography include the rank of the chapter or part of
the book cited. Examples: Footnotes:
Shortened note:
Bibliography in alphabetical
order: Arellano, Ignacio. “El ingenio
conceptista y el criollismo costumbrista de Juan del Valle Caviedes”. En Herencia
cultural de España en América. Siglos XVII y XVIII, editado por Trinidad
Barrera, 9-29. Madrid: Iberoamericana, 2008. To quote an e-book: When citing the online version of
a book, add the URL as part of the quote. For books that are copyrighted
through a commercial library database, mention the name of the commercial
database instead of the URL. In the case of books downloaded
on a device, indicate the format of the device (EPUB, PDF, for example) and
include the name of the format together with the application or device required
to view or acquire the file, if any. Examples: Footnotes:
Shortened note:
Bibliography: Austen, Jane. Pride and
Prejudice. New York: Penguin Classics, 2007. Kindle. Koontz, Harold. Administración
una perspectiva global. México: McGraw-Hill Interamericana, 2008. Adobe
Digital Editions EPUB. Kurland, Philip B., y Ralph
Lerner, eds. The Founders’ Constitution. Chicago: University of
Chicago Press, 1987. http://press-pubs.uchicago.edu/founders/. Olifer, Natalia y Víctor
Olifer. Redes de computadoras: principios, tecnología y protocolos para
el diseño de redes. México: McGraw-Hill, 2009. E-Libro. Rawski, Thomas G. y Lilliam M.
Li, eds. Chinese history in economic perspective. Berkeley:
University of California Press, 1992. http://ark.cdlib.org/ark:/13030/ft6489p0n6/. To quote an article from a
printed or electronic journal: In the notes, mention the
specific pages. In the bibliography include the rank of article. For articles
consulted online include the URL or the database. If the article has DOI (Digital
Object Identified) it is preferable to include this permanent link than the
URL. Footnotes: (Name and Surname(s)
of the author(s), “Title of the article in quotation marks”, in Title of the
journal in italics, volume of the journal (year of publication): page(s) from
where the quote is taken. Bibliography: Surname(s), name of
the author. “Title of the article in quotation marks”. Title of the journal in
italics volume of the journal (year of publication between brackets): first
page - last page of the article. Examples: Footnotes:
Shortened note:
Bibliography (in alphabetical
order): Franck, Juan F. “La subjetividad
de la persona humana y las neurociencias”. Humanidades: revista de la
Universidad de Montevideo, nº 5 (2019): 9-25. https://doi.org/10.25185/5.1. Keng, Shao-Hsun, Chun-Hung Lin, y
Peter F. Orazem. “Expanding college access in Taiwan, 1978–2014: effects on
graduate quality and income inequality”. Journal of Human Capital 11,
nº 1 (Spring 2017): 1–34. https://doi.org/10.1086/690235. Langue, Frédérique.
“Bolivarianismos de papel”. Revista de indias 77, nº 270
(2017): 257-378. http://dx.doi.org/10.3989/revindias.2017.011. LaSalle, Peter. “Conundrum: a
story about reading”. New England Review 38, nº 1 (2017):
95-109. Project MUSE. Ruibal, Elena. “Alonso Quijano,
vencedor de sí mismo”. Humanidades: revista de la Universidad de
Montevideo 5, nº1 (2005): 61-71. To quote a thesis: Footnotes: Name and surname(s) of
the author, “Title of the thesis”, (Doctoral thesis, Master’s thesis,
Bachelor’s thesis, Institution, year) page(s) from where the quote is taken. Bibliography: Surname(s), name of
the author. “Title of the thesis”. Doctoral thesis, Master’s thesis, Bachelor’s
thesis, Institution, year. Examples: Footnotes:
Shortened note:
Bibliography: Jiménez Castillo, Pedro. “Murcia.
De la antigüedad al islam”. Tesis doctoral, Universidad de Granada, 2013. https://digital.csic.es/handle/10261/95860. Lago de Fernández, Carmen
Cecilia. “Repercusión de la actividad orientativa del maestro en la autonomía
del niño”. Tesis doctoral, Universidad Complutense de Madrid, 2006. To quote a press article: The name of the author (if known)
and the title of the article are cited in a very similar way to the
corresponding elements in the journals. The month, the day and the year
are indispensable elements. If the document is published in
any section, you can give the section number (for example, Section 1) or the
title (for example, Nación). Footnotes: Name and surname(s) of
the author, “Title of the article”, Title of the newspaper, day month, year,
section, URL. Bibliography: Surname(s), name of
author. “Article title”. Title of the newspaper, day, month, year. Section.
URL. Examples: Footnotes:
Shortened note:
Bibliography: Erdélyi, László. “Un detective en
el virreinato”. El País (Uruguay), 5 de enero, 2018.
Cultural. https://www.elpais.com.uy/cultural/detective-virreinato.html. If the article does not have an
author, the name of the newspaper goes first. To quote an interview: Unpublished interviews,
conversations, emails, text messages or similar are cited in the text ("In
a telephone conversation with the author on July 7, 2010, the union leader
admitted that ...") or in notes, they are rarely included in the
bibliography. Quotes should include the names of both, the interviewed and the
interviewer; a Brief identification information, if applicable; the place or
date of the interview (or both, if known). Add, if possible, a transcript or
available recording and where it can be found. It usually begins with the name
of the person interviewed. The interviewer, if mentioned, is in second place. Examples: Footnotes:
An interview that has been
published, transmitted or is available online can usually be treated as an
article or another element of a periodical publication. The interviews
consulted online must include the URL. Example: Footnotes:
Shortened note:
Bibliography: Stamper, Kory. “From ‘F-Bomb’ to
‘Photobomb,’ how the dictionary keeps up with English”. Entrevista por Terry
Gross. Fresh Air, NPR, 19 de abril, 2017. Audio, 35:25. http://www.npr.org/2017/04/19/524618639/from-f-bomb-to-photobomb-how-the-dictionary-keeps-up-with-english. To quote a web page: To quote the original content of
a website the following should be included: the title or description of the
specific page (if cited); the title or description of the site as a whole; the
owner or sponsor of the site; and a URL. The citations of the content of
the website can be limited to the text (“On May 2, 2019, the University Library
mentioned on its website ...”) or in a note. If you want a more formal
appointment, it can be done according to the example below. Because the content
is in permanent change, it must include a publication date or date of revision
or modification. If this date can not be determined, include an access date. Example: Footnotes:
Shortened note:
Bibliography: Universidad de Montevideo. Biblioteca
Universitaria. Acceso el 2 de mayo, 2019. http://www.um.edu.uy/vidauniversitaria/biblioteca/. To quote a blog post: Blog posts are cited as online
press articles. Citations include the author of
the publication; the title of the publication, in quotation marks; the title of
the blog, in italics; the date of publication; and a URL. The word blog can be
added in parentheses after the blog title (unless the word blog is part of the
title). Blog entries or comments can be
cited in the text ("In a comment posted on the UM Library blog: news on
April 19, 2016 ...") instead of in a note and, generally, are omitted in
the bibliography. If a bibliography entry is needed, it should appear below the
author of the publication. Name and Surname(s) of the
author, “Title of the entry”, title of the blog (blog), day,
month, year, URL. Example: Footnotes:
Bibliography: Vairo, Daniela. “IV Encuentro
Internacional de Conservación Preventiva e Interventiva en Museos, Archivos y
Bibliotecas”. Biblioteca UM: noticias (blog), 19 de abril,
2016. https://novedadesbiblioteca.wordpress.com/2016/04/19/iv-encuentro-internacional-de-conservacion-preventiva-e-interventiva-en-museos-archivos-y-bibliotecas/. To quote a quote: Citing a source from a secondary
source (“cited in”) should be avoided, since the authors are expected to have
examined the works they cite. However, if an original source is not available,
both the original and the secondary sources must be listed. First the primary source is cited
followed by “cited in” and then the secondary source. Footnotes:
Bibliography Graña González, Manuel. La
escuela de periodismo. Madrid: CIAP, 1950 citado en Miguel Ángel Jimeno
López. El suelto periodístico. Teoría y práctica: el caso de ZigZag. Pamplona:
EUNSA, 1996. Privacy Statement The names and email addresses entered in this journal will be used exclusively for the purposes set forth therein and will not be provided to third parties or for use for other purposes. Data availability: Manuscripts should be submitted with a section called "Data availability", informing whether the dataset is available and, if so, where to access it. In the event that the author has his/her research data on a server, this should be stated in the article. The following sentence should be included within the text: "The dataset supporting the results of this study is available at...". Otherwise, you should include a sentence within the article stating the following: "The dataset supporting the results of this study is not available." |
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