Journal of Transnational American Studies Q4
Unclaimed
Journal of Transnational American Studies is a journal indexed in SJR in Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous) and Cultural Studies with an H index of 15. It is an CC BY Journal with a Single blind Peer Review review system The scope of the journal is focused on cultural studies, literature, ethnicity, gender. It has an SJR impact factor of 0,106 and it has a best quartile of Q4. It is published in English. It has an SJR impact factor of 0,106.
Type: Journal
Type of Copyright: CC BY
Languages: English
Open Access Policy: Open Access
Type of publications:
Publication frecuency: -
- €
Inmediate OANPD
Embargoed OA- €
Non OAMetrics
0,106
SJR Impact factor15
H Index17
Total Docs (Last Year)98
Total Docs (3 years)827
Total Refs19
Total Cites (3 years)75
Citable Docs (3 years)0.15
Cites/Doc (2 years)48.65
Ref/DocOther journals with similar parameters
International Journal of Contemporary Iraqi Studies Q4
Societes Q4
Journal for the Liberal Arts and Sciences Q4
Catholic Historical Review Q4
Local Population Studies Q4
Compare this journals
Aims and Scope
Best articles by citations
A Trans<em>national</em> Native American Studies? Why Not Studies That Are Trans-<em>Indigenous</em>?
Imagining Cultures: The Transnational Imaginary in Postrace America
Discontiguous States of America: The Paradox of Unincorporation in Craig Santos Perez’s Poetics of Chamorro Guam
Translational Form in Ruth Ozeki’s A Tale for the Time Being
'Agrarians or anarchists?' The Venceremos Brigades to Cuba, State Surveillance, and the FBI as Biographer and Archivist
Tricontinental Routes of Solidarity: Stokely Carmichael in Cuba
Excerpt from <i>Fear Itself: The New Deal and the Origins of Our Time</i>
Archipelagic American Studies and the Caribbean
Linguistic Marginalities: Becoming American without Learning English
“Si Nicaragua Venció”: Lesbian and Gay Solidarity with the Revolution
The Problem with Violence: Exceptionality and Sovereignty in the New World
Reflections on Ben Okri, Goenawan Mohamad, and the 2020 Global Uprisings
“Speaking German Like Nobody’s Business”: Anna May Wong, Walter Benjamin, and the Possibilities of Asian American Cosmopolitanism
Obtaining “Sympathetic Understanding”: Gender, Empire, and Representation in the Travel Writings of American Officials’ Wives, 1901–1914
“Perfection with a hole in the middle”: Archipelagic Assemblage in Tiphanie Yanique’s Land of Love and Drowning
Saving Civilization from the "'Green-Eyed' Monster": Emma Goldman and the Sex Reform Campaign against Jealousy, 1900–1930
Bilingual Humor, Authentic Aunties, and the Transnational Vernacular at Gezi Park
Excerpt from <em>Islam Is a Foreign Country: American Muslims and the Global Crisis of Authority</em>
The Banality of American Empire: The Curious Case of Guam, USA
Comments