Dear colleagues,
We are delighted to invite proposals for a Routledge Handbook of Humanities and Social Science Communication. The handbook is under advance contract with anticipated publication in 2027. Chapter proposals are due August 3rd, 2025 and full chapter manuscripts due January 15, 2026. CFP URL: https://bit.ly/rhhssc.
Please direct questions to our collection email address (routledgeha...@gmail.com) or feel free to reach out to one of us individually to discuss chapter ideas.
Best wishes,
Gwendolynne Reid
Call for Proposals: Routledge Handbook of Humanities and Social Science Communication (https://bit.ly/rhhssc)
Editors: Gwendolynne Reid (Emory), Chris Anson (NC State), and Xiao Tan (Utah State)
Since the 1970s, fields ranging from writing across the curriculum (WAC/WID) to English for academic purposes (EAP) and allied fields have studied disciplinary communication with the twin goals of (1) understanding the role of communication in scholarly knowledge
production and (2) making disciplines accessible by teaching disciplinary communication to students and novices. Much of this research, however, has focused on scientific discourse, with “academic” often implicitly standing in for “scientific.”
And yet, communication in the humanities and interpretive disciplines in the social sciences (HSS) differs meaningfully from scientific communication. Beyond differing goals, objects of studies, and epistemologies, humanistic disciplines also have differing social histories, material conditions, institutional and societal positionalities, pedagogical charges, and communicative genres. For example, in many humanities disciplines, the monograph occupies the central epistemic role that the scientific research article occupies in many of the sciences (Elliott).Scholars in these disciplines also have differing relationships with the media and modes of scholarly communication (Fahnestock and Secor): these are often both what and how they study.
This collection seeks to address a gap in how these disciplines have been studied, namely that their disciplinary communication has been understudied, even as it changes in tandem with social and technological changes. And yet, understanding this communication is vital for general education in the humanities and social sciences, for the successful development of the next generation of scholars in those disciplines, and for addressing the opportunities and challenges facing HSS disciplines and the societies they are part of. Of equal and related importance, the lack of research on HSS disciplinary communication is connected with a lack of research on public communication of the humanities and social sciences (Cassidy; Lewis et al.), all while experiments to address this need proliferate (Burton and Fisher; Liu). Not least, understanding HSS communication can tell us much about HSS disciplinary communities, including the exclusionary and colonialist histories of some HSS genres (e.g., Applegarth) that could work against the values and goals they aspire to.
Chapter Proposals
We invite 500- to 750-word chapter proposals for a Routledge Handbook of Humanities and Social Science Communication that seeks to clarify the current state of HSS disciplinary communication and the many issues facing HSS communicators and stakeholders. We welcome proposals from diverse interdisciplinary and international perspectives, including relevant practitioners not in academia (e.g., museum curators, publishers, editors) and invite proposals for the following article types:
We ask that you also indicate which of the following sections your proposal best fits (each section will include all four article types):
To maintain a clear scope for the handbook, we discourage chapter proposals focused on:
Submission Guidelines and Timeline
To submit your proposal to our submission form, please prepare:
The collection is under advance contract with Routledge, an imprint of Taylor & Francis. We encourage authors to review Taylor & Francis’s author guidelines, particularly those focusing on AI.
Estimated timeline:
Please direct questions to our collection email address: routledgeha...@gmail.com. We look forward to your submissions and to advancing the conversation on HSS communication.
Anticipated Audiences
Routledge Handbooks provide comprehensive and accessible overviews of their subjects that include both foundational work and emerging scholarship. They are written accessibly, with an eye towards stimulating dialogue among scholars, students, and stakeholders with diverse backgrounds across national contexts and towards creating a foundation for future scholarship and study. Handbooks typically include 30-35 chapters of approximately 5,000 words in length. See the Routledge Handbook of Scientific Communication for an example.
This handbook will be directed to scholars in humanities and interpretive social science disciplines as well as to stakeholders such as libraries, museums, editors, publishers, scholarly associations, grant-giving organizations, and government agencies. The handbook will be of special interest to students and early researchers in these fields and to their teachers, mentors, and faculty developers. Teachers of English for Academic Purposes as well as those working in post-secondary writing and composition contexts will also find the collection useful (e.g., writing programs, writing centers, writing across the curriculum specialists). We foresee this work also being of interest to those evaluating HSS scholars and scholarship, such as university tenure and promotion committees. Not least, this work has the potential to be useful to the many individuals and organizations responsible for developing relevant academic information technologies and systems, such as bibliographic databases, preservation projects, and digital publishing platforms (e.g., Manifold, Fulcrum, etc.).
Works Cited
Gwendolynne Reid, Ph.D.
(she/her)
Associate Professor of English | Director of the Writing & Communication Program
Treasurer, Small Liberal Arts Colleges Writing Program Administrators (SLAC-WPA)
Oxford College of Emory University | 801 Emory Street, Oxford, GA 30054
gwendoly...@emory.edu | Office location: Pierce Hall 137
If you are receiving this email outside of your working hours, I hope you feel no pressure to read or respond until your schedule and workload permit.
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