Difference between revisions of "Slavia Centralis Journal"
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{{Teaser| | {{Teaser| | ||
− | Since [[established::2008]] [[Slavia Centralis Journal]] aims to publish recent papers, texts and studies in the field of Slavic | + | Since [[established::2008]] [[Slavia Centralis Journal]] aims to publish recent papers, texts and studies in the field of Slavic linguistics and literature. The Journal with an international editorial board was created by four European and one American university (University of Kansas, Charles University of Prague, University of Graz, Eötvös Loránd University of Budapest, and [[University of Maribor]]) and is published by the Department of Slavic Studies and Literature at Maribor's [[Faculty of Arts, University of Maribor|Faculty of Arts]]. The policy of the Journal is to encourage interdisciplinary approaches and to popularise Slavic studies. |
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== Contents and archive == | == Contents and archive == | ||
− | Texts published in the Journal cover a vast variety of topics from different disciplines: | + | Texts published in the Journal cover a vast variety of topics from different disciplines: linguistics, literature, anthropology and history. Texts are published mostly in Slovenian and other Slavic languages, but also texts in English, Hungarian and German are accepted. The Journal's website contains archive of the past editions published under the Open Access licence. |
− | In 2009 text entitled ''Sloglish or the Mixing/Switching of Slovene and English in Slovene Blogs'' by [[Nada Šabec]] was published as an example of | + | In 2009 text entitled ''Sloglish or the Mixing/Switching of Slovene and English in Slovene Blogs'' by [[Nada Šabec]] was published as an example of sociolinguistics and cultural aspects of using a language in the internet environment. |
== See also == | == See also == |
Revision as of 16:37, 3 November 2011
Contents and archive
Texts published in the Journal cover a vast variety of topics from different disciplines: linguistics, literature, anthropology and history. Texts are published mostly in Slovenian and other Slavic languages, but also texts in English, Hungarian and German are accepted. The Journal's website contains archive of the past editions published under the Open Access licence.
In 2009 text entitled Sloglish or the Mixing/Switching of Slovene and English in Slovene Blogs by Nada Šabec was published as an example of sociolinguistics and cultural aspects of using a language in the internet environment.