Hopkins Press
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At Johns Hopkins University Press, we envision a future where knowledge enriches the life of every person. Home to @projectmuse.bsky.social press.jhu.edu
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New issue of American Journal of Philology Vol. 146, No. 3 Fall (2025) muse.jhu.edu/issue/55709 @projectmuse.bsky.social @hopkinspress.bsky.social #openaccess
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hopkinspress.bsky.social
Hopkins Press is excited to announce a partnership with the Association of University Presses and their #AskUp project where aspiring authors can ask university presses about publishing. So, stay tuned and get your questions ready to submit.

https://ow.ly/RYFf50X7ah6
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Welcoming @hopkinspress.bsky.social as #AskUP site host this quarter. Dedicated publishing professionals from the press are standing by to curate & answer new questions about university press publishing.

Got a question about how university presses work? #ReadUP & #AskUP! https://bit.ly/3p9iE9M
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mmodernity.bsky.social
New on Print Plus:
Nicholas Sawicki’s “The Eye and the Hand: On Kafka’s Drawings” examines how Kafka’s sketching practices blur the line between vision and inscription, art and text.

Read here: modernismmodernity.org/articles/saw...
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sel1500to1900.bsky.social
Today is National Coming Out Day, and we're reading an article about one of the most famous stories of (maybe (not)) coming out ever told,:Twelfth Night! Jami Ake's "Glimpsing a 'Lesbian' Poetics in Twelfth Night" (43.2, pp. 375-94)
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studiesinrom.bsky.social
David Mullins, "Shelley's Sleeplistening: Democratic Sorority in Act IV of Prometheus Unbound"
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Greta Colombani, "Invocation, Evocation, Vocation: Communication with the Dead and Poetic Investiture in Felicia Hemans's 'A Spirit's Return.'"
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Hilary Havens, "Maria Edgeworth's Fictional Fragments and Unreliable Narrators."
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studiesinrom.bsky.social
We are excited to announce the publication of our Summer 2025 issue, which includes essays by Hilary Havens, Greta Colombani, and David Mullins. The issue is available Open Access on Project Muse
@projectmuse.bsky.social
: muse.jhu.edu/issue/55681. Details in the thread.
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socres.org
📌 Amartya Sen, 1998 Nobel laureate for contributions to welfare economics, was part of our issue on “Explanation” (Summer 1989) with the article “Economic Methodology: Heterogeneity and Relevance”
Economic Methodology: Heterogeneity and Relevance on JSTOR
AMARTYA SEN, Economic Methodology: Heterogeneity and Relevance, Social Research, Vol. 56, No. 2, Explanation (SUMMER 1989), pp. 299-329
www.jstor.org
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socres.org
📌 William Vickrey, 1996 Nobel laureate for contributions to the economic theory of incentives under asymmetric information, published “Justice, Economics, and Jurisprudence” in our Summer 1979 issue
Justice, Economics, and Jurisprudence on JSTOR
WILLIAM VICKREY, Justice, Economics, and Jurisprudence, Social Research, Vol. 46, No. 2 (SUMMER 1979), pp. 272-281
www.jstor.org
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socres.org
📌 Trygve Haavelmo, 1989 Nobel laureate for pioneering what became the field of economic forecasting, early in his academic career wrote for Social Research a review of a book on the variate difference method (Winter 1941)
Review: [Untitled] on JSTOR
Trygve Haavelmo, Social Research, Vol. 8, No. 4 (NOVEMBER 1941), pp. 511-512
www.jstor.org
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socres.org
📌 Robert M. Solow, 1987 Nobel laureate for contributions to theories of economic growth, was a contributor to the issue dedicated to the book “The Worldly Philosophers” (Summer 2004); his article was titled “Even a Worldly Philosopher Needs a Good Mechanic”
muse.jhu.edu/pub/1/a...
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socres.org
📌 Kenneth J. Arrow, 1972 Nobel laureate for contributions to the general equilibrium theory, published “Current Developments in the Theory of Social Choice” (Social Research, Winter 1997, issue on “Rationality, Choice, and Morality”)
Current Developments in the Theory of Social Choice on JSTOR
KENNETH J. ARROW, Current Developments in the Theory of Social Choice, Social Research, Vol. 44, No. 4, Rationality, Choice, and Morality (WINTER 1977), pp. 607-622
www.jstor.org
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socres.org
Social Research has been lucky to publish not one, not two, but at least five past winners of the Nobel Prize in Economics. They were not only brilliant economists but also good writers able to reach audiences outside of their discipline. Their work is well worth revisiting. #nobelprize
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In the new issue of Bookbird, a survey of four publishers devoted to preserving art, language and storytelling traditions for young Indigenous people: Magabala, Theytus, Inhabit Media, and Black Bears and Blueberries

Read free thru 31 October at Project MUSE

tinyurl.com/4xrfj3fk


Amplifying Indigenous Voices
Four Indigenous Publishing Houses
Maria Scaletti, Julie Barbour, Nicola Daly, 
and Nicholas Vanderschantz
“Symbolically, Indigenous picturebooks communicate the importance of Indigenous knowledge and ways of being in the world. 

(T)here has been a plethora of Indigenous stories retold by non-Indigenous authors, but in recent times Indigenous publishing houses that nurture Indigenous writers and illustrators have been growing in number.”


Bookbird
A Journal of International Children's Literature
Volume 63, Number 3, 2025

Read free thru 31 October 2025
hopkinspress.bsky.social
Don't miss out on 25% off all health and wellness books! Use code HH&W25 to save. From essential guides on aging to public health must-reads, Hopkins Press is your trusted source for health and wellness content.

https://ow.ly/28nY50X8Npa
Dark blue text reading "THE HEALTH & WELLNESS SALE: Save 25% on health books and more! Plus, get free shipping on your $50+ order with code HH&W25" overlaid on top of various JHUP health books.
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How three little words shaped #abortion debates—BACK-ALLEY ABORTION by Emily Winderman, new from @hopkinspress.bsky.social, is OUT NOW and available to buy from bookshops throughout Europe! @blackwells.bsky.social
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socres.org
In open access thru October: "A Conversation," Chinese artist and activist Ai Wei interviewed by gallerist Ethan Cohen in 2016.
tinyurl.com/3mb34bms
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From the 2016 @socres.org special issue "The Fear of Art" gallerist Ethan Cohen interviews dissident artist Ai Weiwei

Read A Conversation with Ai Weiwei and Ethan Cohen for free via @projectmuse.bsky.social thru 31 October

tinyurl.com/3mb34bms

#BannedBooksWeek #AcademicSky
“Fighting for freedom of expression. I never thought that was just for me. I think that is for the condition of all artists and all human beings. This is the most precious right, to be ourselves and to announce ourselves as individuals, and that is best part of life." 

A Conversation:
Ai Weiwei and Ethan Cohen

Social Research: 
An International Quarterly
Volume 83, Number 1, Spring 2016

Read free thru 31 October 2025
hopkinspress.bsky.social
Laurie Marhoefer delves into the impacts of the queer press and censorship in Weimar Germany, revealing that print media is historically key to self-discovery and finding community

Read free in @jwomenshistory.bsky.social at @ProjectMUSE

tinyurl.com/3ycehye4

#BannedBooksWeek #AcademicSky
“(I)n 1929, Helene Stock described the production and distribution of the magazines as a political and even humanitarian act: “I call on all women: commit yourself to a serious deed. Don’t just pursue your own pleasure while thousands of our sisters suffer in muffled despair. Help with enlightenment.””

“The Book Was a Revelation, 
I Recognized Myself in it”
Lesbian Sexuality, Censorship, and the 
Queer Press in Weimar-era Germany
Laurie Marhoefer

Journal of Women’s History
Volume 27, Number 2, Summer 2015

Read free thru 31 October 2025
hopkinspress.bsky.social
While you're at it, preorder your copy of Maria Farland's Degraded Heartland today! It's out November 18!
Degraded Heartland
How did rural America come to be viewed as backward and inferior, and how did literary modernism respond to and critique this perception?What happens when rural America—long romanticized in pastoral literature—becomes associated with deficiency, degradation, and decline? Maria Farland's Degraded Heartland is the first critical study of US literary antipastoral, a mode that exposes the stark realities of rural poverty and ecological devastation while highlighting the jagged process of modernization in the countryside. It provides a historical account of how ideas of rural backwardness developed in US literary culture. Positioned against idealized visions of rural life, the antipastoral interrogates ideas of rural backwardness and deficiency, emphasizing the perceived need for reform through capital investment, mechanization, and education. Antipastoral literature reflects the modernizing impulse—embodied in machinery, scientific agriculture, and incipient agribusiness—while exposing the disruptions these changes provoked. It responds to the nineteenth-century panic around "wastelands" and disturbing episodes like the Eugenics Survey of Vermont and its fascination with rural "degeneracy."Degraded Heartland reveals how writers like Emily Dickinson, Walt Whitman, Robert Frost, and W. E. B. Du Bois grappled with the uneven transformation of the American countryside. In dialogue with agricultural and rural reform discourse, their works underscore the tension between persistent stereotypes of rural stagnation and the realities of a rapidly evolving heartland. This book challenges the dominance of metropolitan modernism and enriches our understanding of the rural modern as a vital and contested space in American culture.
www.press.jhu.edu
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The latest issue of Studies in American Fiction is available to read for free at @ProjectMUSE — it's Charles Brockden Brown and Hawthorne and Whitman, even Pynchon!

muse.jhu.edu/issue/5...
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Maria Farland visited the Hopkins Press table at #MSA2025 to show off her new book Degraded Heartland! Maria's also the editor of Studies in American Fiction!

If you're at the Modernist Studies conference, pop by, say hi, and enjoy the benefits of a ✨ conference discount ✨

Maria Farland, editor of Studies in American Fiction and author of the new Hopkins Press title Degraded Heartland poses with her book at the Hopkins Press table at the 2025 Modernist Studies Association conference
hopkinspress.bsky.social
Offering fresh insights for policymakers, development practitioners, and scholars, "How Ordinary People Make Aid Work" redefines what it takes to make aid truly impactful.

https://ow.ly/MNUx50X8MZ1
The book "How Ordinary People Make Aid Work: Civic Engagement and Health Aid Effectiveness" Stefan Kruse on a green background.