Afro-Hispanic Review

English-Spanish academic journal From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Afro-Hispanic Review is an English-Spanish bilingual peer-reviewed academic journal published by Vanderbilt University's Department of Spanish and Portuguese and the Bishop Joseph Johnson Black Cultural Center.[1][2] The journal focuses on the study of Afro-Latino literature and culture, both in the United States and internationally.[3] Published twice annually,[1] it has been described as the "premier literary journal in Afro-Hispanic studies."[4] Its editor-in-chief is William Luis (Vanderbilt University).[4]

DisciplineAfro-Hispanic studies
LanguageEnglish, Spanish
EditedbyWilliam Luis
History1982–present
Quick facts Discipline, Language ...
Afro-Hispanic Review
The Bishop Joseph Johnson Black Cultural Center at Vanderbilt University, which houses the journal.
DisciplineAfro-Hispanic studies
LanguageEnglish, Spanish
Edited byWilliam Luis
Publication details
History1982–present
FrequencyBiannually
Standard abbreviations
ISO 4Afro-Hisp. Rev.
Indexing
ISSN0278-8969 (print)
2327-9648 (web)
Links
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The journal was established in January 1982 at Howard University, with Stanley Cyrus as its founding editor. Beginning in 1986, it was published at the University of Missouri, as a collaboration between the departments of Black studies and Romance languages. It was transferred to Vanderbilt and its Bishop Joseph Johnson Black Cultural Center in 2005.[2]

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