The research article should be systematically prepared with citations, wherever needed, and shall be limited to 4000-5000 words;preferred font:Times New Roman; Font size: 12 dpi for regular text and 10 dpi for block quotations and footnotes.
File name shall contain the author’s surname and the main title of the article.
Provide an abstract of 150 words, and a very brief profile of the author (curriculum vitae) in 30 words, and a few Keywords(maximum 8).
Use italics for emphasis, titles of books and journals, and foreign words that are not in the dictionary.
Avoid underlining and bold in the text. Titles of sections and subsections, however, may be given in bold letters.
Avoid inserting additional lines of space between paragraphs.
Use a single space after the period at the end of sentences as well as after a colon.
Use Subheadings to make your organization clear to your readers. There should be no need for more than three levels of subheads.
Use footnotes in the MLA style using Times New Roman Font size: 10 dpi.
Citation style for books:
1. Laurie Kain Hart, Time, Religion, and Social Experience in Rural Greece, Lanham, Md.: Rowman & Littlefield, 1992, 242-243.
Citation style for chapters from edited books:
2. Gary A. Olson and Evelyn Ashton-Jones, “The Politics of Gendered Sponsorship: Mentoring in the Academy” in Gender and Academe, eds. Sara Munson Deats and Lagretta Tallent Lenker, Lanham, Md.: Rowman & Littlefield, 1994, 231-246.
Citation style for articles in journals:
3. Jane R. Bush, “Rhetoric and the Instinct for Survival,” Political Perspectives 29, 3 (March 1990), 45-53.
Citation style for articles from newspapers:
4. Michael Norman, “The Once-Simple Folk Tale Analyzed by Academe,” New York Times, 5 March 1984, 15(N).
Citation style for papers read at conference:
5. Eviatar Zerubavel, “The Benedictine Ethic and the Spirit of Scheduling” (paper presented at the annual meeting of the International Society for the Comparative Study of Civilizations, Milwaukee, Wis., April 1978), 17-19.
Citation style for internet sources:
6. Lauren P. Burka, “A Hypertext History of Multi-User Dimensions,” MUD History1993, <http://www.ccs.neu.edu/home/1pb/mud-history.html> (5 February 2007).(The date given in brackets refers to the date of access)
Citation style for repeated references to the same work (use short form references after the first instance;do not use ibid. and op. cit., etc.)
1. Laurie Kain Hart, Time, Religion, and Social Experience in Rural Greece, Lanham, Md.: Rowman & Littlefield, 1992, 242-243.
2. Hart, Time, Religion, and Social Experience in Rural Greece,246.
3. Gary A. Olson and Evelyn Ashton-Jones, “The Politics of Gendered Sponsorship: Mentoring in the Academy” in Gender and Academe, eds. Sara Munson Deats and LagrettaTallentLenker, Lanham, Md.: Rowman & Littlefield, 1994, 231-246.
4. Olson and Ashton-Jones, “The Politics of Gendered Sponsorship,” 236.
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