编者注

Q2 Arts and Humanities Philip Roth Studies Pub Date : 2023-01-01 DOI:10.1353/prs.2023.a907256
Aimee Pozorski, Maren Scheurer
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We have come to appreciate, even find comfort in, the cyclical nature of editing a peer reviewed journal—seeing an essay come in before sending it out to two anonymous readers, communicating with the authors invaluable feedback from our editorial board, filing accepted work for safe keeping and, over a year later, returning to it again to undertake the process of preparing the essay for publication. This process involves at least three more readings—one for argument, one for paragraph and sentence coherence, and one for copy editing. The process is long and for some, mentally draining. It is also, paradoxically, invigorating and restorative. It ends in something we can all hold in our hands or read online, a production in every sense of the word. The back and forth we undertake with contributors can be dizzying, electrifying, exhausting, and rewarding. We sometimes worry for our authors who undertake this journey with us and may not realize that being added to the backlog is only a first step of many that ultimately ends with a near finalized draft in their inboxes. These drafts contain for us what feels to be the universe, ongoing conversations we engage with each other and with Dr. Jessica Rabin, our associate copy editor, about our positions on such issues as diction, punctuation, and style. We are now at the point in our careers editing Philip Roth Studies where we are mindful that we are building on the backlog for our successors. We are preparing to deliver what we hope are similarly wise remarks for the next team seeking to build [End Page 1] and cultivate our most treasured asset: the store of essays that will keep the journal going long after we step away. 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引用次数: 0

摘要

最近,我们一直在思考积压稿件的问题——这既是编辑恐惧的最大源泉,也是希望的最大源泉。这个词本身意味着积累、未完成的事业和需要照顾或处理的工作。虽然其内涵并不总是积极的,但对于同行评议期刊的编辑来说,大量的积压工作可能是一份难得的礼物。这意味着学者和读者都在投入自己的投稿来维持期刊的运行。它还假定了信任:信任编辑们将以正直和尊重的态度处理工作,信任在同行评议过程完成后,期刊将继续存在。四年多前,当我们成为菲利普·罗斯研究的联合执行编辑时,我们的前任黛布拉·肖斯塔克博士和大卫·布劳纳博士提出了智慧和警告:要注意积压。待办事项是日志成功的关键。我们把这个建议牢记于心,像照料花园一样照料我们的积压,期待着它结出果实的那一天。在过去的几年里,我们很高兴与Deb和David接受的作者合作,我们也很高兴与在那之后加入的作者合作。我们已经开始欣赏,甚至从中找到安慰,编辑同行评议期刊的周期性——看到一篇文章在发给两个匿名读者之前,与作者沟通我们编委会的宝贵反馈,将接受的作品归档保存,一年多后,再次回到它的身边,为文章的发表做准备。这个过程包括至少三次阅读——一次是为了论证,一次是为了段落和句子的连贯性,还有一次是为了文字编辑。这个过程是漫长的,对一些人来说,是精神上的消耗。矛盾的是,它还能让人精神焕发,恢复元气。它以某种我们都能拿在手里或在网上阅读的东西而告终,这是一部名副其实的作品。我们与贡献者之间的交流可能令人眼花缭乱,令人兴奋,令人筋疲力尽,但也有回报。我们有时会担心我们的作者,他们和我们一起经历了这段旅程,他们可能没有意识到,被添加到待办事项列表中只是许多人的第一步,最终他们的收件箱里会有一份接近定稿的草稿。这些草稿包含了我们感觉像是宇宙的东西,我们彼此之间以及与我们的副文案编辑杰西卡·拉宾博士(Jessica Rabin)关于我们在措辞、标点和风格等问题上的立场的持续对话。我们现在在编辑菲利普罗斯研究的职业生涯中,我们注意到我们是在为我们的继任者积累积累。我们正准备为下一个团队提供我们希望同样明智的评论,以寻求建立和培养我们最宝贵的资产:在我们离开后很长一段时间内保持期刊的文章存储。对于那些多年来与我们一起工作的人,对于那些在我们任职期间提交论文的人,我们感谢你们相信我们会特别照顾你们的独特想法,并继续建立在期刊本身的遗产之上。对于Philip Roth Studies尚未投稿的读者,我们诚邀您将您最好的作品寄给我们,这些作品将很快交到下一届编辑团队手中。在这一期,我们作为编辑的倒数第二期,我们回顾了一个过程,标志着我们最后一次投入到菲利普罗斯研究的积压中。下一期将由艾拉·纳德尔客串编辑,目录已经确定。一年后,一个新的团队将掌舵,他们将是保持这一进程的人。在这些页面上,我们将自豪地发表五篇杰出的文章,这些文章已经等待了一年多的时间,除了一项记录之外……
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Editors’ Note
Editors’ Note Aimee Pozorski and Maren Scheurer We have lately been thinking about the idea of the backlog—at once an editor’s greatest source of fear and hope. The word itself connotes accumulation, unfinished business, and work that needs to be tended or addressed. And while the connotations are not always positive, for an editor of a peer reviewed journal, a robust backlog can be a rare gift. It means that scholars and readers are invested in keeping the journal going with a submission of their very own. It also assumes trust: trust that the work will be handled by editors with integrity and respect and trust that the journal will continue, long after the peer review process is complete. When we became co-executive editors of Philip Roth Studies now over four years ago, our predecessors, Dr. Debra Shostak and Dr. David Brauner, offered words of wisdom and warning: be mindful of the backlog, they said. The backlog holds the key to the success of the journal. We took this advice to heart and cultivated our backlog as one tends a garden, looking forward to a time when it bears fruit. In the last few years, we have had the pleasure of working with the authors whose work was accepted under Deb and David, and we have had the pleasure of working with authors who came on board after that. We have come to appreciate, even find comfort in, the cyclical nature of editing a peer reviewed journal—seeing an essay come in before sending it out to two anonymous readers, communicating with the authors invaluable feedback from our editorial board, filing accepted work for safe keeping and, over a year later, returning to it again to undertake the process of preparing the essay for publication. This process involves at least three more readings—one for argument, one for paragraph and sentence coherence, and one for copy editing. The process is long and for some, mentally draining. It is also, paradoxically, invigorating and restorative. It ends in something we can all hold in our hands or read online, a production in every sense of the word. The back and forth we undertake with contributors can be dizzying, electrifying, exhausting, and rewarding. We sometimes worry for our authors who undertake this journey with us and may not realize that being added to the backlog is only a first step of many that ultimately ends with a near finalized draft in their inboxes. These drafts contain for us what feels to be the universe, ongoing conversations we engage with each other and with Dr. Jessica Rabin, our associate copy editor, about our positions on such issues as diction, punctuation, and style. We are now at the point in our careers editing Philip Roth Studies where we are mindful that we are building on the backlog for our successors. We are preparing to deliver what we hope are similarly wise remarks for the next team seeking to build [End Page 1] and cultivate our most treasured asset: the store of essays that will keep the journal going long after we step away. To those of you who have worked with us over the years, to those who have submitted essays during our tenure, we thank you for believing we would take special care of your singular ideas and continue to build on the legacy of the journal itself. To the readers of Philip Roth Studies who have not yet put their oars in, we are inviting you to send us your best work for a backlog that will soon be in the hands of the next editorial team. In this issue, our penultimate as editors, we look back at a process that marks our final plunge into the backlog of Philip Roth Studies. The next issue will be guest-edited by Ira Nadel and that table of contents is set. In a year from now, a new team will be at the helm, and they will be the ones to keep the process going. In these pages, we are publishing with pride five remarkable essays that have waited over a year to see the light in addition to a record...
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Philip Roth Studies
Philip Roth Studies Arts and Humanities-Literature and Literary Theory
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