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American Academy of Religion Back Matter Source: Journal of the American Academy of Religion, Vol. 48, No. 1 (Mar., 1980), pp. 165-167 Published by: Oxford University Press Stable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/1463592 . Accessed: 18/06/2014 17:28 Your use of the JSTOR archive indicates your acceptance of the Terms & Conditions of Use, available at . http://www.jstor.org/page/info/about/policies/terms.jsp . JSTOR is a not-for-profit service that helps scholars, researchers, and students discover, use, and build upon a wide range of content in a trusted digital archive. We use information technology and tools to increase productivity and facilitate new forms of scholarship. For more information about JSTOR, please contact [email protected]. . Oxford University Press and American Academy of Religion are collaborating with JSTOR to digitize, preserve and extend access to Journal of the American Academy of Religion. http://www.jstor.org This content downloaded from 195.34.79.79 on Wed, 18 Jun 2014 17:28:31 PM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions
Transcript
Page 1: Back Matter

American Academy of Religion

Back MatterSource: Journal of the American Academy of Religion, Vol. 48, No. 1 (Mar., 1980), pp. 165-167Published by: Oxford University PressStable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/1463592 .

Accessed: 18/06/2014 17:28

Your use of the JSTOR archive indicates your acceptance of the Terms & Conditions of Use, available at .http://www.jstor.org/page/info/about/policies/terms.jsp

.JSTOR is a not-for-profit service that helps scholars, researchers, and students discover, use, and build upon a wide range ofcontent in a trusted digital archive. We use information technology and tools to increase productivity and facilitate new formsof scholarship. For more information about JSTOR, please contact [email protected].

.

Oxford University Press and American Academy of Religion are collaborating with JSTOR to digitize, preserveand extend access to Journal of the American Academy of Religion.

http://www.jstor.org

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Page 2: Back Matter

(continued from page 1)

0 Book Notices Bousset, Wilhelm, Religionsgeschichtliche Studien:

Aufsiitze zur Religionsgeschichte des Hellenistischen Zeitalters (Supplements to Novum Testamentum, L) Janet Timbie 117

McLelland, Joseph C., God the Anonymous: A

Study in Alexandrian Philosophical Theology (Patristic Monograph Series, No. 4) H. Martin Rumscheidt 118

Weber, Timothy P., Living in the Shadow of the Second Coming: American Premillennialism, 1875-1925 Robert T. Handy 120

Benjamin, Philip S., The Philadelphia Quakers in the Industrial Age: 1865-1920 Hugh Barbour 120

Rowe, Kenneth E., ed., Methodist Union Catalog: Pre-1976 Imprints Charles Wallace, Jr. 121

Warshaw, Thayer S., Religion, Education and the Supreme Court Norman Lederer 122

Roca, Paul M., Spanish Jesuit Churches in Mexico's Tarahumara Bruce Walter Barton 124

Ames, William; Gibbs, Lee W., trans., Technometry (Haney Foundation Series, 24) William A. Clebsch 124

Malalgoda, Kitsiri, Buddhism in Sinhalese Society. 1750-1900: A Study of Religious Revival and Change Roy C. Amore 125

Norman, E. R., Church and Society in England, 1770-1970: A Historical Study Charles I. Wallace, Jr. 127

Berger, Max; Hausler, Wolfgang; Lessing, Erich, Judaica. Die Sammlung Berger: Kult und Kultur des Europiiischen Judentums Joseph Gutmann 127

Long, David E., The Hajj Today: A Survey of the Contemporary Pilgrimage to Makkah Harry B. Partin 128

Macquarrie, John, Christian Hope Christopher Morse 130 Morse, Christopher, The Logic of Promise

in Moltmann's Theology Francis Schiissler Fiorenza 130 Ford, Lewis S., The Lure of God: A Biblical

Background for Process Theism Dennis A. Norlin 132

Ogden, Schubert M., Faith and Freedom: Toward a Theology of Liberation Donald Heinz 134

Schillebeeckx, Edward; Hoskins, Hubert, trans., Jesus: An Experiment in Christology Seely Beggiani 134

Wenzler, Ludwig, Die Freiheit und das Bose nach Vladimir Solov'ev (Symposium 59) Louis J. Shein 135

Zernov, Nicholas, and Pain, James, eds., A Bulgakov Anthology Louis J. Shein 136

Simon, Ulrich, A Theology of Auschwitz: The Christian Faith and the Problem of Evil Glenn Jacobson 136

Geffr6, Claude, and Dhavamony, Mariasusai, eds., Buddhism and Christianity G. W. Houston 137

Rupp, George, Beyond Existentialism and Zen: Religion in a Pluralistic World Peter Slater 138

165

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Page 3: Back Matter

Apczynski, John V., Doers of the Word: Toward a Foundational Theology Based on the Thought of Michael Polanyi (American Academy of Religion Dissertation Series, 18) Joseph Kroger 139

Capps, Walter Holden, and Wright, Wendy M., eds., Silent Fire: An Invitation to Western Mysticism Robert A. Segal 139

Christ, Carol P., and Plaskow, Judith, eds., Womanspirit Rising: A Feminist Reader in Religion Mara E. Donaldson 140

Goldenberg, Naomi R., Changing of the Gods: Feminism and the End of Traditional Religions Sandra Beth Berg 141

Neville, Robert C., Soldier, Sage, Saint Gary Stewart Bedford 142 Hackett, Stuart C., Oriental Philosophy:

A Westerner's Guide to Eastern Thought John Y. Fenton 143 Dillon, John, The Middle Platonists, 80 B.C.

to A. D. 220 David G. Trickett 144 Fletcher, Joseph, Humanhood: Essays in

Biomedical Ethics Barbara Ann DeMartino Swyhart 145 Davis, W. Jackson, The Seventh Year Gary Davis 146 Nelson, James B., Embodiment: An Approach to

Sexuality and Christian Theology John B. Bell 148 Brome, Vincent, Jung Gerald Schorr 148 Vincie, Joseph F., and Rathbauer-Vincie, Margretta,

C. G. Jung and Analytical Psychology: A Comprehensive Bibliography (Garland Reference Library of the Social Sciences, 38) Robert A. Segal 149

Thompson, William M., Christ and Consciousness: Exploring Christ's Contribution to Human Consciousness Gerald Schorr 150

Lapointe, Francois H., and Lapointe, Claire C., Claude LAvi-Strauss and His Critics: An International Bibliography of Criticism (1950-1976) followed by a Bibliography of the Writings of Claude LAvi-Strauss (Garland Reference Library of the Humanities, 72) Robert A. Segal 150

Lane, Christel, Christian Religion in the Soviet Union: A Sociological Study Louis J. Shein 151

Rosenau, Helen, Vision of the Temple: The Image of the Temple of Jerusalem in Judaism and Christianity Joseph Gutmann 152

Stevenson, J., The Catacombs: Rediscovered Monuments of Early Christianity Joseph Gutmann 152

Eliade, Mircea; Trask, Willard R., trans., A History of Religious Ideas, Volume 1: From the Stone Age to the Eleusinian Mysteries J. W. Cullum 153

166

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Feys, Jan, The Yogi and the Mystic: A Study in the Spirituality of Sri Aurobindo and Teilhard de Chardin Robert N. Minor 155

Ibish, Yusuf, and Marculescu, Ileana, eds., Contemplation and Action in World Religions G. W. Houston 155

0 Books Received 159

Zen-as it evolved through the teachings of the great masters.

THOMAS HOOVER Beginning with its twin THE roots in Indian Bud-

dhism and Chinese Taoism, the develop- ment of the Zen doc-

V trine is traced through

__

the 17th century The

EXPERIENCE most important mas- ters are discussed, _EXPE_ _ ENC along with their indi-

vidual contributions to the

S• history of the religion. The

S• result is not only a descrip- tion of Zen practice, but a concise history as well.

Rich in historical back- ground, vivid in anecdote, memorable in quotation.

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Illustrated with over twenty classic drawings. PLUME ORIGINAL Z5228/$4.95

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LIBRARYf. 1633 Broadway,

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167

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Page 5: Back Matter

INSTRUCTIONS FOR CONTRIBUTORS TO JAAR

1. Submit four copies of the manuscript (original not necessary if all copies are clearly readable and reproducible).

2. Submit with the manuscript an Abstract, not to exceed 400 words, comprising a succinct statement of the thesis(es) or central claim(s) of the article together with a very brief listing of the major lines of defense.

3. All materials must be double-spaced, including quotations, Notes, and Works Consulted.

4. All reference material (Notes, Works Consulted) is to appear at the end of the MS. (See "Format for Notes and Documentation.")

5. Title of Ms should be in roman type and centered; capitalize first letters only. Author's name should be in upper- and lower-case letters, under title.

6. Submit a brief author's vita to include institutional affiliation and position, academic degrees, and other writings.

7. For articles accepted for publication, bibliographical data must be prepared in the social sciences format explained on the following pages.

8. Abbreviations for biblical references (including Apocrypha, Pseudepigrapha, Mishnaic and related literature, etc.) follow those established for the Journal of Biblical Literature ("Instructions for Contributors," JBL, 95/2, [June, 1976]).

9. Quoted matter of up to ten typed lines should be run into the text; over ten lines, set apart from the text, indented without quotation marks, DOUBLE-SPACED.

10. Only one Ms will be returned to the author, and that only if accompanied by return postage (loose stamps, please).

11. Both solicited and unsolicited materials are subject to editorial evaluation and minor modification.

12. Authors receive seventy-five reprints gratis. Additional reprints are not available.

13. Authors must secure permissions to quote from materials carrying a copyright where citations are of "substantial length."

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Page 6: Back Matter

JAAR Format for Notes and Documentation

The format used for notes and documentation in JAAR is that common- ly referred to as the "social sciences format." Under this format there are three elements: notes, documentation, and list of Works Consulted. These items may be discussed separately.

1.0 Notes (Endnotes). Under this format a clean distinction is to be drawn between notes and documentation. Notes should be confined to extraneous comments, elaborations, and explanations that take the reader beyond the basic content of the text. They should not be essential to the understanding of the text. If a note is essential to the clarity of the main text, it should be a part of the text. Notes should therefore be used sparingly: most statements which do not belong in the body of the text probably do not belong in the essay at all.

1.1 Legitimate notes, because they are asides or extensions to be followed up at the choice of the reader, are to be placed at the end of the essay. They are therefore endnotes.

1.2 The place in the text to which the note refers is to be marked, as is customary, by arabic numbers. Note that numbers, however, are not set down in superscript; they are to be set on the line and marked off by slashes, thus / 1/. Omitting the use of superscript numbers greatly aids the compositor.

1.3 As indicated, notes are listed at the end of the article under the heading NOTES. Under this heading each note should be indicated by a slash, arabic number, slash (/ 1/ I ) flush with the left margin. The first line of the note text should be indented with all ensuing lines flush to the left margin. The whole should be DOUBLE-SPACED.

2.0 List of Works Consulted. 2.1 In advance of preparing the final list and in the process of

writing itself, the author will find it useful to work from a card-file of works consulted. In the event additions are made in the process of writing, it is then only necessary to insert a new card. Enter each work or article on a separate card in the following form:

Crossan, J. D. 1973 In Parables. New York: Harper & Row

When the file is complete the cards should be alphabetized by author. If there is more than one entry for an author, that author's entries should be ordered chronologically from the earliest to the latest work. If there are two or more entries for a single author in a given year, those entries are alphabetized by title, and the letters a, b, c, etc., appended to the year.

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Page 7: Back Matter

Thus:

Barthes, Roland 1972a Critical Essays. Evanston: Northwestern

University Press.

1972b Mythologies. New York: Hill and Wang.

Modifications may occasionally be advisable, as in the following examples:

Kant, Immanuel 1793 Religion Within the Limits of Reason Alone.

Translated by Theodore M. Greene and Hoyt H. Hudson. New York: Harper Torchbooks, 1960.

Aquinas, Thomas S.Th. Summa Theologiae. 3 vols. Turin: Marietti, 1952-

56.

2.2 One should include in the list of Works Consulted those articles and books which either form the immediate background of the

essay or are part of the documentation. It is perfectly appropriate to list works to which specific reference is not made, providing the author wishes to announce that he or she is drawing on those works in some more or less immediate sense, or that the reader would gain perspective on the

subject matter by reading those works. 2.3 When the final list of Works Consulted is typed, entries

should appear in alphabetical order by author; author's last name should be flush with the left margin, followed by given names; the publication date of the work is indicated under the author's name; the title of the entry is to be indented from the date line and double spaced (see above, 2.1). Be sure to provide complete bibliographical information.

3.0 Documentation. 3.1 It is the point of documentation referencing to lead the

reader to the proper item in the Works Consulted. 3.2 Documentation references are to be incorporated in the

text in the briefest form possible. Elements of the reference not included in the text should be enclosed in parentheses within the sentence in which the reference appears. The following simple rules apply:

(1) Author already mentioned in the text, only one work listed in the Works Consulted, no page reference; nothing needed in the text; (2) Author already mentioned in the text, only one work listed in the Works Consulted, give page reference: (56);

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Page 8: Back Matter

(3) Author already mentioned in the text, more than one work listed in Works Consulted, give year and page reference: (1974:56); (4) Author not mentioned in the text, only one work listed in the Works Consulted, give author and page only: (Roberts: 56); (5) Author not mentioned in the text, more that one work listed in the Works Consulted, give author, year, and page: (Roberts, 1974:56); (6) Author not mentioned in the text, more than one work in the Works Consulted, no page reference: (Roberts, 1974); (7) When referring to two or more works by the same author: (Roberts, 1974:56, 1975:25); (8) General references to an author (Roberts), to a particular work by an author (1974), or to a mixture of items (Roberts, 1974:56; Crossan, 1973; Barthes, 1972b:17).

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Page 9: Back Matter

AT T+E FOREFRONT

OF TI+EOLOGY

Johann Baptist Metz FAITH IN HISTORY AND SOCIETY Toward A Practical Fundamental Theology "Metz's efforts to work out a 'practical funda- mental theology' oriented to 'social praxis' are bound to prove fruitful for all who are concerned with the basic questions of Christian reflection." -Schubert Ogden, Southern Methodist Univer- sity

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Walter Kasper THEOLOGY OF CHRISTIAN MARRIAGE St. Augustine's "three goods of marriage" provide the framework for fresh insights on Christian marriage today.

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Robert C. Neville CREATIVITY AND GOD A Challenge to Process Theology How process theism fails properly to address the fundamental ontological questions that are the chief problematic of system theology.

(May) $12.95

Paul M. van Buren DISCERNING THE WAY A Theology of the Jewish-Christian Reality Reflects on the burden of the Holocaust and the state of Israel, factors central to a reconstruction of Christian theology.

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John Dominic Crossan CLIFFS OF FALL Paradox and Polyvalence in the Parables of Jesus Expands and enhances the author's earlier In Parables, and fully explores polyvalence, or semantic pluralism, in Jesus' parables.

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Edward Schillebeeckx CHRIST The Christian Experience and the Modern World A continuation of the author's Jesus, An Exper- iment in Christology-the major work recently under examination by Vatican authorities on doctrine. This volume discusses the Christian ex- perience with Jesus the Christ and with New Testament theologies of grace and salvation.

(August) $29.50

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