Journal Editor
Managing Editor, Aeternum: The Journal of Contemporary Gothic Studies
The Gothic Association of New Zealand and Australia
2018–2024Aeternum: The Journal of Contemporary Gothic Studies (ISSN2324-4895) is an open-access biannual on-line journal. It offers peer-reviewed academic articles. The purpose of the Journal is to provide an emphasis on contemporary Gothic scholarship, bringing together innovative perspectives from different areas of study.
Aeternum welcomes contributions from the breadth of contemporary Gothic Studies, with a focus on:
- contemporary issues within Gothic scholarship, such as technology, digitality, geo-cultural politics, food studies, and global communication;
- varied and multi-faceted readings of the Gothic, recognising the importance and impact of cultural differences on the genre;
- innovative and fresh perspectives on the Gothic within traditional areas such as literature, television and film;
- areas of research which go beyond disciplines and subjects traditionally associated with Gothic research;
- under-represented areas and disciplines which nonetheless have a strong Gothic focus and have built influential portfolios, such as animation, design, digital humanities, dramaturgy, cultural history, food studies, music, and pedagogy;
- international scholarship which considers perspectives and topics originating not only from North America and Europe, but also other prolific areas of Gothic scholarship such as Australasia.
- over-looked regional incarnations of the Gothic and how they interact with issues of a global nature.
Journal Editor
Associate Editor, The Australasian Journal of Popular Culture
The Australasian Journal of Popular Culture (Journal)
ISSN 20455852 , ONLINE ISSN 20455860
The Australasian Journal of Popular Culture is a double-blind peer-reviewed journal devoted to the scholarly understanding of everyday cultures. It is concerned with the study of the social and cultural meanings that are produced and circulated through everyday media and practices as products of consumption. It explores popular narratives and iconographies as intellectual objects of inquiry, and as integral components of the dynamic forces that shape societies and identities. The journal publishes articles that focus on Australasian examples, as well as broader critical and comparative topics viewed through a global lens.
This title is indexed with Scopus.
For more information, to access the journal or to subscribe visit the Discover platform here.