Book reviews are a good way to get started with writing for a journal and this Learning and CPD activity takes you through the process of understanding the aims of book review, undertaking practice pieces through to reviewing a book and advice on the dos and don'ts of book reviewing.N/
In The Origin of Others, Pulitzer Prize-winning author and recipient of the Nobel Prize in Literatur...
The digital era has changed the way we humans read a book. No longer are words confined to a bound l...
As flaws in the peer review process are highlighted and calls for reform become more frequent, it ma...
Professor Fleur Johns offers 10 rules of thumb that have guided her own reviewing efforts and may pr...
In this feature essay, David Beer argues that reviewing allows us to put collective knowledge ahead ...
The literature review is a staple of the scholarly article. It allows authors to summarise previous ...
In Book Wars: The Digital Revolution in Publishing, John B. Thompson explores the digital transforma...
This presentation is a guide for authors interested in writing and reviewing papers in the scholarsh...
In Radical War: Data, Attention and Control in the Twenty-First Century, Matthew Ford and Andrew Hos...
In Crumpled Paper Boat: Experiments in Ethnographic Writing, editors Anand Pandian and Stuart McLean...
In Cut/Copy/Paste: Fragments from the History of Bookwork, Whitney Trettien explores how seventeenth...
Brexit is as big and dangerous a mistake as that of appeasement in the 1930s. So argues Cato the You...
In The Book, Amaranth Borsuk explores our ever-changing definitions and conceptions of the book in l...
One of the first megajournals, PLOS ONE, has played a significant role in changing scholarly communi...
Drawing on her book, Cut/Copy/Paste, Whitney Trettien reflects on the history of radical bookwork an...
In The Origin of Others, Pulitzer Prize-winning author and recipient of the Nobel Prize in Literatur...
The digital era has changed the way we humans read a book. No longer are words confined to a bound l...
As flaws in the peer review process are highlighted and calls for reform become more frequent, it ma...
Professor Fleur Johns offers 10 rules of thumb that have guided her own reviewing efforts and may pr...
In this feature essay, David Beer argues that reviewing allows us to put collective knowledge ahead ...
The literature review is a staple of the scholarly article. It allows authors to summarise previous ...
In Book Wars: The Digital Revolution in Publishing, John B. Thompson explores the digital transforma...
This presentation is a guide for authors interested in writing and reviewing papers in the scholarsh...
In Radical War: Data, Attention and Control in the Twenty-First Century, Matthew Ford and Andrew Hos...
In Crumpled Paper Boat: Experiments in Ethnographic Writing, editors Anand Pandian and Stuart McLean...
In Cut/Copy/Paste: Fragments from the History of Bookwork, Whitney Trettien explores how seventeenth...
Brexit is as big and dangerous a mistake as that of appeasement in the 1930s. So argues Cato the You...
In The Book, Amaranth Borsuk explores our ever-changing definitions and conceptions of the book in l...
One of the first megajournals, PLOS ONE, has played a significant role in changing scholarly communi...
Drawing on her book, Cut/Copy/Paste, Whitney Trettien reflects on the history of radical bookwork an...
In The Origin of Others, Pulitzer Prize-winning author and recipient of the Nobel Prize in Literatur...
The digital era has changed the way we humans read a book. No longer are words confined to a bound l...
As flaws in the peer review process are highlighted and calls for reform become more frequent, it ma...