Committees
Editorial board
Journal published by: the College of the Holy Cross (Worcester, Mass., USA), Université Paris-Diderot (France) and Université de Bourgogne-Franche-Comté (UBFC, France)
Founding editor: Michel Baridon (Université de Bourgogne)
Directors: Sophie Aymes (UBFC), Maurice A. Géracht (Holy Cross)
Chief editor: Marie-Odile Bernez (UBFC)
Editorial board: Carole Cambray (Paris-Diderot), Madigan Haley (Holy Cross), Véronique Liard (UBFC), Fiona McMahon (UBFC), Christelle Serée-Chaussinand (UBFC), Brittain Smith (Holy Cross), Shannon Wells-Lassagne (UBFC)
Book Review Editor: Fiona McMahon (UBFC)
Treasurer: Christelle Serée-Chaussinand (UBFC)
Advisory board
- Stephen Bann (University of Bristol, UK)
- Catherine Bernard (Université Paris-Diderot, France)
- Pascale Borrel (Université Rennes 2, France)
- Johanna Drucker (UCLA, University of California, Los Angeles, USA)
- Julie Grossman (Le Moyne University, USA)
- John Dixon Hunt (University of Pennsylvania, USA)
- Philippe Kaenel (UNIL, Université de Lausanne, Switzerland)
- Liliane Louvel (Université de Poitiers, France)
- Frédéric Ogée (Université Paris-Diderot, France)
- Veronique Plesch (Colby College, USA)
- Jean-Michel Rabaté (University of Pennsylvania, USA)
- Gabriele Rippl (UNIBE, University of Bern, Switzerland)
- Monique Tschofen (Ryerson University, Canada)
Scientific policy
Interfaces is a bilingual (English/French) scholarly journal founded by Michel Baridon (University of Burgundy) in 1991, edited by the College of the Holy Cross (Worcester, Massachusetts, USA), the University of Burgundy and the University of Paris-Diderot. It focuses on intermediality, on the relationship between text(s) and image(s), art and literature, history and visual sources as well as extending to the history of the visual arts and the epistemology of images, especially in a comparative perspective in francophone and anglophone domains. The papers appearing in Interfaces focus on contemporary theoretical debates (digital creation and images, theories of adaptation, theoretical advances, etc.) and the journal will broaden its ambit to include geographical areas that are under-represented in our fields of research (Africa, South America, Asia).
Interfaces addresses specialists of various disciplines in the Humanities directly, but might also interest some science departments focusing on classes in epistemology and the history of the sciences, as well as specialists in adjoining fields like publishing.
Interfaces moved online in 2018 and its editorial standards meet the requirements of open digital edition.