Rebecca Seib and Mott Greene speak at the Johns Hopkins Club, November 3 & 4

Next week, JHU Press will host two special programs in our lunch and lecture series at the Johns Hopkins Club on the university’s Homewood campus. Descriptions are below, along with links to more information about the books and authors. Reservations are required, and the cost is $20 per person for each lunch and talk. Books will be for sale before and after the programs, and the authors will be signing copies. Hopkins Club members may contact the Club to make a reservation; non-members may arrange to attend by contacting Jack Holmes at JHU Press at 410-516-6928 or jmh@press.jhu.edu.
seibMDHSNovember 3 / 12:30 p.m. Lunch & Lecture: “Indians of Southern Maryland” with MdHS author Rebecca Seib An important new book from the Maryland Historical Society Press tells the story of Southern Maryland’s Native people from the end of the Ice Age to the present. Rebecca Seib, a cultural anthropologist and one of the book’s authors, joins us to explore this remarkable history of human and environmental change, adaptation and survival, and the surprising truths beyond the stereotypes. Read more about the book here. Rebecca’s coauthor, Helen Rountree, discussed the book on WYPR earlier this year. Rebecca Seib is an applied anthropologist and has worked with Indian people throughout the United States for over 30 years. She has assisted Indian communities in rebuilding their economies in a culturally appropriate manner.
greeneNovember 4 / 12:30 p.m. Lunch & Lecture: “Alfred Wegener: Science, Exploration, and the Theory of Continental Drift” with JHU Press author Mott Greene Written with great immediacy and descriptive skill, Mott Greene’s new biography of Alfred Wegener is a powerful portrait of the scientist who discovered continental drift and pioneered the modern notion of unified Earth science. Wegener deserves to be much better known, and Prof. Greene (a MacArthur fellow and award-winning historian of science) joins us to tell a fascinating story of a wonderfully adventurous life and the ongoing impact of one of the great minds of modern science. Read more about the book and watch a video with Mott here. Read an amazing review of the book in the journal Nature. Mott T. Greene is an affiliate professor of earth and space sciences at the University of Washington and John Magee Professor of Science and Values emeritus at the University of Puget Sound. He is the author of Geology in the Nineteenth Century: Changing View of a Changing World and Natural Knowledge in Preclassical Antiquity.    
Publish Date:
Related News
Top 20 Articles of December 2024
Which Hopkins Press journal articles were you reading most in December? We tallied up our Project MUSE results and found you were reading about the history of GLP-1 pharmaceuticals, work-from-home conditions around the world, Afro hair in the time of slavery...
Top 20 Articles December 2024
Callaloo: A Reading List Across the Decades
To accompany our podcast interview with Callaloo executive editor Kyla Kupferstein Torres, we took a survey to collect some of the memorable entries Callaloo has published over the years. Callaloo, the premier journal of literature, art, and culture of the...
Hopkins Press Podcast - Kyla Kupferstein Torres on the Future of Callaloo
Top 20 Articles of November 2024
The Top 20 most-read Hopkins Press journal articles in November on Project MUSE features an array of topics, from who defines democracy to the ways wealth impacted women's suffrage. This month's list follows below!
Top 20 Articles November 2024