Cambridge Journal of Postcolonial Literary Inquiry
Published by Cambridge University Press
ISSN : 2052-2614 eISSN : 2052-2622
Abbreviation : Camb. J. Postcolonial Lit. Inq.
Aims & Scope
The Cambridge Journal of Postcolonial Literary Inquiry is a new peer-review journal that aims to deepen our grasp of postcolonial literary history, while enabling us to stay comprehensively informed of all critical developments in the field.
The journal provides a forum for publishing research covering the full spectrum of postcolonial critical readings and approaches, whether these center on established or lesser known postcolonial writers or draw upon fields such as Modernism, Medievalism, Shakespeare and Victorian Studies that have hitherto not been considered central to postcolonial literary studies, yet have generated some of the best insights on postcolonialism.
The journal aims to be critically robust, historically nuanced, and will put the broadly defined areas of literature and aesthetics at the center of postcolonial exploration and critique.
View Aims & ScopeMetrics & Ranking
Impact Factor
Year | Value |
---|---|
2025 | 0.5 |
2024 | 0.30 |
SJR (SCImago Journal Rank)
Year | Value |
---|---|
2024 | 0.131 |
Quartile
Year | Value |
---|---|
2024 | Q2 |
h-index
Year | Value |
---|---|
2024 | 12 |
Journal Rank
Year | Value |
---|---|
2024 | 26228 |
Journal Citation Indicator
Year | Value |
---|---|
2024 | 34 |
Impact Factor Trend
Abstracting & Indexing
Journal is indexed in leading academic databases, ensuring global visibility and accessibility of our peer-reviewed research.
Subjects & Keywords
Journal’s research areas, covering key disciplines and specialized sub-topics in Arts and Humanities and Social Sciences, designed to support cutting-edge academic discovery.
Most Cited Articles
The Most Cited Articles section features the journal's most impactful research, based on citation counts. These articles have been referenced frequently by other researchers, indicating their significant contribution to their respective fields.
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Strange Weather: Indigenous Materialisms, New Materialism, and Colonialism
Citation: 51
Authors: Alison
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“Our Forces Have Redoubledâ€: World Literature, Postcolonialism, and the Afro-Asian Writers’ Bureau
Citation: 36
Authors: Duncan M.
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“We are changeâ€: The Novum as Event in Nnedi Okorafor’s<i>Lagoon</i>
Citation: 25
Authors: Hugh Charles
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“Let Us All Mutate Togetherâ€: Cracking the Code in Laing’s<i>Big Bishop Roko and the Altar Gangsters</i>
Citation: 14
Authors: Ian P.