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Vacancies

NJES Literary editor

Seeking new literature editor for NJES

The Nordic Journal of English Studies is seeking a new literature editor in 2026. The position is currently held by Virginia Langum, and the linguistics editor is Terry Walker. Terry Walker will stay on as linguistics editor. We invite applications for the position as literature editor
from interested members and supporters of the Nordic Association of English Studies (NAES), as well as other relevant parties.

The Nordic Journal of English Studies (NJES) is affiliated with the NAES. NJES was created in 2002 in order to offer a forum for Nordic scholars in English language and literature and to promote the field of English studies in the Nordic countries. It has been an online, open access
journal since 2008.

As of 2023, the journal is published by Publicera, an open-access platform for scholarly journals. Publicera is managed by the National Library of Sweden. https://publicera.kb.se/njes/index

The literature editor fields submissions, assigns reviewers and coordinates the substantive editing process. Copy editing is currently handled by the linguistics editor. The literature editor also works with editors of literature special issues. NJES has an editorial board that the editors can approach for peer review or suggestions of peer reviewers if submissions are
relevant to their fields.


Please send your CV and a one page letter outlining your interest and relevant experience to
Anna Swärdh (anna.swardh@english.su.se) by 31 August 2025.

Applications will be examined by the Executive Board of the NAES, which will also make a recommendation to the NAES board for a decision with regard to the appointment of the new editor.

We wish to express our deepest gratitude to Virginia for her exceptional service to the journal and to English Studies in the Nordic countries.

For the Executive Board,
Dominic Rainsford, Jason Finch, Anthony Johnson, and Anna Swärdh

Categories
CFP

NJES Call for Papers

NJES special issue on Teaching literature in Nordic L2 English classrooms, Spring 2027


Over the past three decades, policy in the Nordic countries has emphasised the positive relation between research and teaching—for teacher professionalism, for student outcomes and for school development—and this has led to significant investments in educational research. These have not only bolstered the establishment of English language education research, but also heralded the emergence of the sub-field of literature education in English as a second, additional or foreign language (L2). This sub-field, which is positioned between the humanities and educational science, theorises and empirically investigates the norms, principles and assumptions underlying literature teaching and learning practices. It bridges literary studies with L2 English instruction and thereby provides crucial insights for both teachers and researchers.

This NJES special issue aims to present the latest research on the teaching of literature in English classrooms across primary and secondary education in the Nordic countries. The special issue has a threefold ambition: first, to showcase the breadth and relevance of this sub-field for L2 English education, second, to further the scholarly conversation about the teaching of literature in L2 English across the Nordic countries, and, third, to contribute with research findings that can underpin the research-teaching nexus in Nordic teacher education programmes and school teaching.
We welcome conceptual and empirical contributions on the teaching of literature in L2 English. Submissions employing qualitative, quantitative, or mixed methods approaches are welcome. Potential areas of focus include, but are not limited to:

  • The purposes, nature and potential of literature instruction (e.g., conceptual studies)
  • The conditions for teaching literature (e.g., policy, textbook studies)
  • The characteristics of literature instruction (e.g., classroom observation studies)
  • Effective teaching designs (e.g., action research, design-based, intervention studies)
  • Student and teacher perceptions of literature instruction (e.g., interview, survey studies)


The editors invite expressions of interest for potential inclusion in the special issue by August 31, 2025. Invitations for full manuscripts will be sent to authors by September 15, 2025. Full manuscripts (max 8,000 words, incl. references) will be due to the editors March 15, 2026. All manuscripts will be double-blind peer reviewed.

Please send your expression of interest to Katherina Dodou katherina.dodou@ils.uio.no and Marit Elise Lyngstad marit.lyngstad@inn.no

Submission Guidelines for Expressions of Interest:
Title: A provisional title for the proposed manuscript.
Abstract: A brief abstract (250–300 words) outlining the scope, aims, methodology, and potential contribution of the research.
Key Contributions: A statement (1–2 sentences) summarizing the unique contributions the manuscript is expected to make to the field of L2 English literature education.
Keywords: Include up to five keywords.
Author Information: Name(s), institutional affiliation(s), and contact details of the author(s).