Style & Tone
The SHGAPE Blog seeks to advance excellent scholarship in the GAPE and be accessible to a general audience. This means that you should write your blog piece in a more conversational tone, not one you would employ in a traditional journal. An ideal essay submission has a clear and concise argument with a compelling narrative. We encourage pieces to make a connection to contemporary issues, although it is not a requirement.
We will consider any piece that contributes original research on the Gilded Age and Progressive Era (GAPE), which we broadly define as 1865-1920s.
In addition to traditional essays, we also encourage the submission of graphic essays, videos, or other non-traditional forms. The blog is open to any researcher, regardless of affiliation. You do not need to be a member of SHGAPE to publish, although you’re welcome to join us!
Some useful examples:
- Sara Harwood, “Teaching Digital Literacy through a Walking Tour about the 1906 Atlanta Race Riot“
- Coyote Shook, “Flu in the Arctic” [graphic essay]
- Theresa Ventura, “Lessons from 1911: Taal Volcano, American Colonialism, and Philippine Disaster Nationalism“
Pitches
- Send pitches to Co-Editor Chelsea Gibson at cgibson2 at binghamton dot edu
- Pitches should include a short bio and a few sentences describing your topic, approach, and, if applicable, connection to contemporary issues
Submissions & Editing
- If your pitch is approved and we request a full submission, finished pieces should be submitted as a word document (.docx or Google Doc) to Chelsea Gibson
- At this stage, please include any potential images and a contributor bio (see contributor bio instructions below)
- Within one to two weeks, our editors will return your essay with comments in a Google Doc, which you may answer in the Google Doc or download and edit in a .docx file
- Editors will review your revisions and may ask for further changes
- Please note: most submissions go through at least two rounds of editing before approval
- The entire process typically takes anywhere from four to six weeks
Length
- We typically publish pieces between 750-1500 words
Titles & Subtitles
- Try to come up with a pithy and catchy title that avoids the ubiquitous “:”
- When appropriate, we encourage you to break up your essay into subheadings
Images
- Images are not required but are highly encouraged
- It is the author’s responsibility to secure rights for publication or ensure your image is not copyrighted
- Please include clear citations when submitting your image/s
Citations & References
- We use footnotes and follow the Chicago Manual Style for formatting
- Footnotes should be reserved for direct citations
- When possible, you should use hyperlinks as a citation rather than a footnote — we strongly encourage you to take advantage of the digital forum and link out to relevant libraries, sources, news articles, or other scholarship
- No bibliography is necessary, but you can include a “further reading” list if appropriate
Contributor Bio
- Please keep your biography to 50 words or less & use hyperlinks when appropriate
- If applicable, include your Twitter handle