About APA Studies on Philosophy and the Black Experience
APA Studies on Philosophy and the Black Experience is published by the committee on the status of Black philosophers. Direct all correspondence concerning APA Studies content and submission deadlines to the editor(s). Other inquiries may be directed to Erin Shepherd.
In the latest issue
From the Editors
Anthony Sean Neal and Björn Freter
Editorial
“Some Thoughts on William R. Jones’s 1974 ‘Crisis in Philosophy: The Black Presence’,” Anthony Sean Neal
Submission Guidelines and Information
Articles
“An Afro-Relational Account of the Non-Human and Transhuman Entities,” Kenneth Uyi Abudu
Book Reviews
“‘Writing assures me I am.” A Review of Tsitsi Dangarembga’s Black and Female’,” Reviewed by Björn Freter
“A Masterclass in Rewriting the History of African Philosophy: Some Remarks on Sophie Bosedé Olayemi Olúwolé’s Milestone Socrates and Òrúnmìlà. Two Patron Saints of Classical Philosophy,” Reviewed by Björn Freter
“An Ingenious Revolution of Epistemology: A Review of Abosede Priscilla Ipadeola’s Feminist African Philosophy: Women and the Politics of Difference,” Reviewed by Björn Freter
Submission Guidelines and Information
APA Studies on Philosophy and the Black Experience is published by the committee on the status of Black philosophers. Authors are encouraged to submit original articles and book reviews on any
topic in philosophy that makes a contribution to philosophy and the Black experience broadly construed. The editors welcome submissions written from any philosophical tradition, as long as they make a contribution to philosophy and the Black experience
broadly construed. The editors especially welcome submissions dealing with philosophical issues and problems in African American and Africana philosophy.
All article submissions should be between 10 and 20 pages (double spaced) in length, and book reviews should be between 5 and 7 pages (double spaced) in length. All submissions must follow the APA guidelines for gender-neutral language and The Chicago Manual of Style formatting. All submissions should be accompanied by a short biography of the author. Please send submissions electronically to apa.philbe.newsletter@gmail.com.
Deadlines
Fall issues: May 1
Spring issues: December 1
Co-Editors
Anthony Neal, lead editor
Bjorn Freter, associate editor
Michael Omoge, assistant editor
Contact information
Anthony Neal and Bjorn Freter at apa.philbe.newsletter@gmail.com
Formatting guidelines
APA Studies adheres to The Chicago Manual of Style.
Use as little formatting as possible. Details like page numbers, headers, footers, and columns will be added later. Use tabs instead of multiple spaces for indenting. Use italics instead of underlining. Use an em dash (—) instead of a double hyphen (--).
Use endnotes instead of footnotes. Examples of proper endnote style:
John Rawls, A Theory of Justice (Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1971), 90.
See Sally Haslanger, “Gender and Race: (What) Are They? (What) Do We Want Them To Be?” Noûs 34 (2000): 31–55.
See the APA submission guidelines for more information.