New Literary History (new-literary-history)
Journal positioning
New Literary History, published by Johns Hopkins University Press, is devoted to theory
and interpretation — to questions about the nature, method, and history of literary study
rather than to readings for their own sake. Its defining expectation is an essay that
asks a genuine theoretical or methodological question: what literature is, how it
means, why we read it as we do, how categories like period, genre, value, or
interpretation are constituted and might be rethought. A close reading without a
conceptual question behind it, or a survey of a critical school, is a poor fit; the
journal wants reflection that reorients how the discipline thinks. This skill is a fit /
venue-selection / re-framing aid. It does not replace the journal's current submission
guidelines. Before submitting, re-check the live New Literary History author instructions.
When to trigger
- The author names New Literary History for an essay on literary theory, method, or history and wants a fit/framing check.
- A reading-driven piece must be re-framed around the theoretical or methodological question it implicitly raises.
- The author is choosing between New Literary History and a high-theory or close-reading venue.
- The author needs the journal's theory-of-literature bar and desk-reject heuristics.
Scope & topic fit
- Theory of literature and interpretation: meaning, reading, value, genre, periodization, canon, and the concept of "literature" itself.
- Reflection on critical methods and their histories — how schools, paradigms, and protocols of reading arise and change.
- Conceptual essays drawing on philosophy, history of ideas, cognitive science, or the social sciences to rethink literary categories.
- Histories of criticism and theory that bear on present method, not antiquarian for its own sake.
- Cross-traditional and comparative reflection when the payoff is a rethought general category.
- Essays that propose a new way of posing a literary-theoretical problem.
Method & evidence bar
- The contribution is an original conceptual or methodological argument; the essay is driven by a question about literary study, not by a single text's reading.
- Theoretical and historicist resources are marshaled rigorously to reframe a category or method.
- Where texts are read, the reading exemplifies or tests the conceptual claim rather than standing as the end in itself.
- The essay engages the relevant theoretical and critical literature precisely, situating its question in an ongoing conversation.
- Argumentation is conceptually careful: distinctions are drawn, terms clarified, consequences traced.
- Claims about "what literary study does" are supported, not merely proclaimed.
Structure & house style
- Reflective scholarly essay organized around a theoretical question; re-check current length expectations and essay types on the live guide.
- The governing question and its stakes are posed early; the essay develops a sustained line of conceptual argument.
- Citation follows the journal's current humanities style; notes carry qualification and secondary debate.
- Double-blind review: anonymize the manuscript (self-citations and acknowledgements) per current policy.
- Non-English quotations are given with translations per policy; any reproduced material requires permissions.
- Prose is conceptually precise and addressed to readers across literary fields, not to one specialty.
Official-submission checklist
- Before giving submission-ready advice, read
../../resources/source-basis.md and ../../resources/official-source-map.md; start from the JHU Press anchors, then cite the current New Literary History page you checked.
- Search the live site for "New Literary History submission guidelines" and follow the current version.
- Re-check essay types, length expectations, and the abstract requirement.
- Confirm the citation/style format and anonymization for double-blind review.
- Re-check the translation policy for non-English quotation and any permissions.
- Re-check prior-presentation/preprint, simultaneous-submission, and AI-use disclosure policies.
- If the live official instructions conflict with this skill, the official instructions win.
Pre-submission self-check
Common desk-reject triggers
- A close reading with no conceptual or methodological question behind it.
- A descriptive survey of a critical school with no original theoretical claim.
- Theory invoked as label rather than argued to reframe a category or method.
- A "rethinking" announced but with no distinctions drawn or consequences traced.
- No engagement with the relevant theoretical conversation the essay claims to enter.
- Wrong venue: a reading or interpretation better suited to a broad or specialist literary journal.
Re-routing decision
- Broad-readership interpretive essay →
pmla.
- Agenda-setting theory across the arts and humanities generally →
critical-inquiry.
- New-historicist, archive-grounded analysis →
representations.
- Historically grounded account of literary change rather than theory of method →
modern-language-quarterly.
- Cross-linguistic or world-literature framing →
comparative-literature.
Output format
[Fit] High / Medium / Low (one-line reason)
[Target] New Literary History
[Question] <the theoretical/methodological question in one line>
[Category at stake] <which literary concept or method is being rethought>
[Theoretical idiom] <does the conceptual argument reframe the category and clear the theory-of-literature bar?>
[Top risk] <the single most likely reason for rejection>
[Official items to re-check] <length / citation style / anonymization / translations / permissions>
[Re-route suggestion] <if not a fit, a better-matched venue>