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Pubblicare su SMEA Nuova Serie

SMEA Nuova Serie è una pubblicazione del Consiglio Nazionale delle Ricerche, Roma.

Per proporre un articolo da pubblicare in SMEA NS o suggerire un testo da pubblicare come volume supplementare, contatta:

Submission

SMEA Nuova Serie is published by Consiglio Nazionale delle Ricerche, Roma.

To submit a manuscript for publication in SMEA Nuova Serie or to propose a supplementary volume of SMEA Nuova Serie contact:

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Open access and self-archiving policies

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he copyright on the publication of SMEA NS belongs to CNR-Istituto di Scienze del Patrimonio Culturale. Authors are not allowed to disseminate their articles on the World Wide Web – including websites such as academia.edu and open access repositories – until two years after publication. They are also required to ensure that anyone receiving their offprints observes these rules as well. If they wish to archive their articles in institutional repositories, please contact smea@ispc.cnr.it with regard to the payment of the article processing fee.

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Guidelines for contributors

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ach article must be submitted in both Word and PDF version.

The text must be typed in Times New Roman. Figures, plates, and tables must be provided as separate files. In the PDF version, authors must indicate where they wish figures and tables to appear in the article. The text must be preceded by a summary. Acknowledgements, if any, should be placed at the end of the text, before the bibliographical references. After the bibliographical references, the full names of the authors, their affiliations and their e-mail addresses should be added, together with five keywords relevant to the article.

As a rule, SMEA NS publishes articles in English, but exceptionally articles in Italian, French, Spanish and German are also accepted. Authors who do not write in their own language are strongly recommended to have their articles checked by a native speaker before submitting them to the editorial board.

  • Texts should be submitted by 31 December of the current year.

Summary

The summary of the article, of no more than 300 words, must be in Times New Roman, 11 pt.

Headings

The title of the article must be in capitals, Times New Roman, 14 pt.
Second-level headings must be in capitals, Times New Roman, 12 pt.
Third-level headings must be standard, Times New Roman, 12 pt.
Bibliography, catalogues, and acknowledgements must be in Times New Roman, 11 pt.
Footnotes must be in Times New Roman, 10 pt.

  • Please, avoid footnotes as much as possible.

Citations

Preferably, bibliographical references should be cited within the text using the ‘Harvard’ style (author’s name, publication date, page, illustration). E.g.:

  • Mountjoy 1997, 122, figs. 7.41, 42; Mountjoy, Mommsen 2006, 117.

Please, note that:

Two or more publications by the same author in the same year must be distinguished using ‘a’, ‘b’, etc. (e.g., 2004a; 2004b).

A semicolon must be used to separate years of publication by the same author (Mountjoy 1997; 2008) and to separate citations by different authors (Mountjoy 1997; Kanta 1980).

When citing works with more than three authors, the form Mountjoy et al. 1978 may be used, but the names of all authors must be given in the relevant entry in the bibliography at the end of the article.

Abbreviations

Apart from those commonly used (ca., e.g., cf., et al., etc., n., nn., no., nos., fig., figg., figs., tav., tavv., pl., pls., ed., eds., vol., voll., vols., pers. comm.), abbreviations should be avoided as much as possible; abbreviations such as ibid., id., loc. cit., op. cit., should also be avoided.

Italicisation

Foreign words and short quotations should be italicised. Likewise, ancient words and technical terms should be italicised according to the usages of the individual disciplines.

Greek transliterations

Modern Greek personal names and place names cited in the text must be transliterated. Authors should pay attention in using the same transliterating system within the article. If in doubt, the following system should be followed:

α β γ δ ε ζ η θ ι κ λ µ ν ξ ο π ρ σ/ς τ υ φ χ ψ ω
a v g d e z i th i k l m n x o p r s t y ph ch ps o

For transliterating diphthongs and consonant combinations the following system might be used:

αι ai
αυ af (before a voiceless consonant)
αυ av (before a vowel or voiced consonant)
ει ei
ευ ef (before a voiceless consonant)
ευ ev (before a vowel or voiced consonant)
οι oi
ου ou
υι yi
γγ ng
γχ nch
γκ (initial) g
γκ (medial) gk
µπ (initial) b
µπ (initial) b
ντ (initial) d
ντ (medial) nt

Quotations marks, dates, numerical notations

Quotation marks should be double “…”.
Dates in the text must be written in words (sixth century BC).
Numbers below 10 must be written in words, those above 10 in figures.

Bibliographical references

All works cited must be listed at the end of the article in alphabetical order by author and, within this, in chronological order of publication under the heading “References” (Times New Roman, 11 pt).

  • The list of bibliographical references must only include the works cited in the text.

Works with two or more authors must contain surnames separated by a comma. E.g.:

  • Courtois J.-C., Webb J.M. 1987, Les cylindres-sceaux d’Enkomi (Fouilles française 1957-1970), Paris.

Abbreviations of periodicals and series must follow the American Journal of Archaeology (104, 2000, 3-24) and Orientalia (82, 2013, 1-4). In the case of periodicals or series not included in the above-mentioned journals, the titles should not be abbreviated.

Titles of works must be given in the original language and script (Greek, Cyrillic, etc.) or in an alphabet with diacritics and special letters as e.g. in Turkish. Authors’ names must be transcribed in Latin characters.

For the use of capital letters in titles, the spelling rules of the individual languages must be followed. In Italian titles, please keep the use of capital letters to a minimum.

Special abbreviations of ancient works, corpora, reference works, etc., used in the text must be listed before the bibliographical references under the heading “Abbreviations” (Times New Roman, 11 pt).

Some example of bibliographical references:

Books:

Russell J.M. 1997, From Nineveh to New York: The Strange Story of the Assyrian Reliefs in the Metropolitan Museum and the Hidden Masterpieces at Canford School, New York.

Journal articles:

Reade J. 1972, The Neo-Assyrian Court and Army: Evidence from the Sculptures, Iraq 34, 87-112.

Articles or chapters in edited volumes (1 author):

Bohrer F.N. 1994, The Times and Spaces of History: Representation, Assyria, and the British Museum, in Sherman D.J., Rogoff I. (eds), Museum Culture: Histories, Discourses, Spectacles, Minneapolis, 197-222.

Articles or chapters in edited volumes (2 authors):

Bailey D.M., Hockey M. 2001, ‘New’ Objects from British Museum Tomb 73 at Curium, in Tatton-Brown V. (ed.), Cyprus in the 19th Century AD. Fact, Fancy and Fiction. Papers of the 22nd British Museum Classical Colloquium, December 1998, Oxford, 109-133.

Articles or chapters in edited volumes (3 authors or more):

Efstratiou N., Karetsou A., Banou E.S., Margomenou D. 2004, The Neolithic settlement of Knossos: new light on an old picture, in Cadogan G., Hatzaki E., Vassilakis A. (eds), Knossos: Palace, City, State (BSA Studies 12), Athens, 39-49.

Unpublished dissertations:

Tzonou-Herbst I. 2002, A Contextual Analysis of Mycenaean Terracotta Figurines, Ph.D. diss., University of Cincinnati.

Web materials:

Stockhammer P.W. 2008, Kontinuität und Wandel — Die Keramik der Nachpalastzeit aus der Unterstadt von Tiryns (Heidelberg), http://www.ub.uniheidelberg.de/archiv/8612/.) Access date: 12 April 2014.

Images

Images will be printed in grayscale (colour images must be negotiated).

All images must be supplied with a resolution of 300 dpi in TIFF format, together with captions, which must be short and contain all necessary information.

  • Please don’t send images in JPG, GIF or Powerpoint files.

When images are printed in group, authors must supply one figure with individual components labelled (a), (b), etc. within the figure itself (e.g. Fig. 1a-b). The same system must be used for figures and tables.

The full list of captions must be sent as a separate file.

All images must be cited within the article with capital case initial letter (e.g., Fig.1, Table 1).

Copyrights

SMEA protects its interests and those of authors. For this reason, authors must sign a form of consent when correcting the first draft of the article.

Authors have sole responsibility for obtaining permission of images used in the article (both published and unpublished) as well as for images taken from the web.

Offprints

The authors will receive a pdf version of their article via e-mail.

Open Access and self-archiving polices

The copyright of SMEA NS belongs to the Consiglio Nazionale delle Ricerche. Authors may not disseminate their articles on the World Wide Web – including websites such as academia.edu and open access repositories – earlier than two years after publication. Authors are also required to ensure that anyone who receives their offprints observes these rules. If they wish to archive their articles in institutional repositories, please contact smea@ispc.cnr.it for payment of the article processing fee.

  • Authors are requested not to announce on the web that their articles are forthcoming in SMEA NS before they have received official notification that their manuscripts have been accepted for publication.

Peer reviewing

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n order to be published in SMEA NS, a paper should represent an advancing in knowledge and understanding in a field of interest for our journal. All the submitted manuscripts are read by the Editorial Board. Only those papers that are of potential interest and meet our criteria are sent for formal review, to one or two reviewers.

A part from the members of the SMEA boards, the reviewers are chosen among  leading scholars, or especially promising younger scholars, of the various disciplines that are object of interest for the journal. Before sending the text, the potential reviewer is asked about his intention to accept to work for SMEA. Preferentially the reviewers remain anonymous to the authors.

The reviewers, whose main task is to help the Editorial Board to make their decisions, are asked to write down their comments in a separate narrative consisting of at least 3 paragraphs:

  1. a general comment on the article, indicating points of force and of weakness, level of innovation in respect to the main thesis, quality of references etc., and clearly stating what is their opinion about the publication of the article, which can be accepted, rejected, or accepted after revision.
  2. detailed comments to the text (mentioning page, line, note) indicating what has to be changed, corrected or eliminated;
  3. final suggestions for changes, additions, corrections, or even cutting of the text.

Parts of the reviews might be sent to the authors to help them to revise their texts.