Hispanic Research Journal promotes and disseminates research into the cultures of the Iberian Peninsula and Latin America, from the Middle Ages to the present day. The fields covered include literature and literary theory, cultural history and cultural studies, language and linguistics, and film and theatre studies. Hispanic Research Journal publishes articles in four languages; Spanish, Portuguese, Catalan, and English, and encourages, especially through its features section, debate and interaction between researchers all over the world who are working in these fields. .
The Hispanic Review is a quarterly journal devoted to research in Hispanic literary and cultural studies. Published since 1933 by the Department of Romance Languages at the University of Pennsylvania, the journal features essays and book reviews on the diverse cultural manifestations of Spain and Latin America, from the medieval period to the present.
Huntington Library Quarterly publishes articles on the literature, history, and art of the sixteenth to eighteenth centuries in Britain and America, with special emphasis on:* the interactions of literature, politics, and religion;* the social and political contexts of literary and art history;* textual and bibliographical studies, including the history of printing and publishing;* American studies, through the early nineteenth century; and*the performance history of drama and music.The journal also publishes book reviews and review articles on important work in early modern studies. The Intramuralia section now reports comprehensively on the Huntington's acquisitions of rare books, manuscripts, and ephemera.Current special issues of the journal include "Supplement to the Guide to Medieval and Renaissance Manuscripts in the Huntington Library" (compiled by Peter Kidd), "Prison Writings in Early Modern England" (edited by William H. Sherman and William J. Sheils), "Religion and Cultural Transformation in Early Modern England" (edited by Lorna Clymer), and "The Places and Spaces of Early Modern London" (edited by Deborah Harkness and Jean E. Howard). For further information about Huntington Library Quarterly, please visit the Huntington Library homepage.
Iberoromania is the oldest journal in the German-speaking regions dealing specifically with the Ibero-Romance languages and literature of Europe and America. The journal provides a leading article, an issue focusing on current topics at regular intervals, followed by a review issue, in which a few selected new publications are covered in detail. In addition, the Iberoromania has become more open to Ibero-Romance languages and literature outside of Europe and America, above all in African.