The Conference on Christianity & Literature

Journal - Subscription Rates

Christianity and Literature  (ISSN 0148-3331) is published quarterly by the Conference on Christianity and Literature. Its editorial offices are at Pepperdine University, 24255 Pacific Coast Hwy, Malibu, CA 90263-7232. Membership to the Conference on Christianity and Literature includes a subscription to the journal.

You may begin or renew memberships online through PayPal by following this link to our online payment page. You may also pay by mail. To do that, download the subscription form and follow mailing and payment information on the form.

Membership/subscription  rates are as follows:

  • individuals, $25 per year/$45 for two years
  • institutions, $35 per year/$65 for two years
  • retired/emeritus faculty, $20 per year/$35 for two years
  • students, $20 per year/ $35 for two years

Canadian and other subscribers who will receive the journal at a non-U.S. address must add a surcharge of $10 per year/$18 for two years.

Individual copies of past journals may be purchased for $10; please see our page on back copies for more information.  One complimentary copy of a recent journal issue is available upon request by anyone considering membership in CCL.

All payments should be made in U.S. currency.

 Christianity and Literature also welcomes subscribers at the following special levels:

  • Supporting membership/subscription: $50/one year or $90/two years
  • Sustaining membership/subscription: $100/one year or $185/two years
  • Patron membership/subscription: $300/one year or $500/two years
  • Lifetime membership/subscription: $1,000

Membership fees paid above the regular subscription level are considered a donation to the Conference on Christianity and Literature and as such are tax deductible.

To become a member of CCL and start your subscription to the journal, or for any other inquiries, please contact  Tammy Ditmore, managing editor, at tammy.ditmore@pepperdine.edu.

Return to main Journal page

Questions to Tammy Ditmore (tammy.ditmore@pepperdine.edu)

In the Latest Issue of Christianity & Literature:

What is
Given

Julie L. Moore

As though Moses himself
is standing high
upon this
Rocky Mountain cliff
poised to proclaim
once again God's law,
cars and SUVs pull over,
line up along both sides
of the national park's
concrete curve, cameras
angling, people pointing,
awestruck by a
simple white goat,
her beard and horns
marking her, unmoved
by all the commotion
hundreds of feet below.

She's just standing
where she's safe,
where her kid,
half-hidden by her side,
entices the crowd
that hungers for more
but must be satisfied,
always,
with what is given.

Spring 2008