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Description
A peer-reviewed open-access journal publishing original research, review articles, and scholarly studies across the humanities and cultural studies. KJHCS provides a vibrant intellectual platform for historians, philosophers, linguists, communication scholars, and cultural researchers to advance humanistic knowledge and critical inquiry into the ideas, expressions, traditions, and cultural systems that define human civilisation, with a particular commitment to amplifying African voices, indigenous knowledge, and the cultural heritage of the developing world.
Aims and Scope
KJHCS welcomes original research articles, review papers, essays, and short communications spanning all areas of the humanities and cultural studies. Subject areas include history and historiography, African history and postcolonial studies, philosophy and ethics, political philosophy and philosophy of science, linguistics and applied linguistics, language documentation and revitalisation, sociolinguistics and discourse analysis, translation and interpretation studies, communication studies and rhetoric, media studies and journalism, digital media and new media cultures, film and visual culture, literary studies and criticism, creative writing and oral literature, cultural heritage and museum studies, indigenous knowledge systems and epistemologies, cultural identity and cultural politics, religion and society, gender and cultural studies, folklore and ethnography, arts and aesthetic theory, intercultural and cross-cultural communication, and the cultural dimensions of globalisation and development. The journal is particularly interested in interdisciplinary research that bridges the humanities with social sciences, technology, and policy. Studies that critically examine questions of identity, memory, representation, power, and cultural change are strongly encouraged. Research that foregrounds African philosophical traditions, indigenous knowledge systems, oral histories, and cultural heritage preservation in the face of globalisation and digital disruption is especially welcomed. Both theoretical contributions that advance humanistic scholarship and applied research with direct relevance to cultural policy, heritage management, media practice, and intercultural dialogue are within scope.