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Hopkins Press Podcast 4.11 Victoria Moul reads poetry in translation from Literary Imagination
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Koritha Mitchell: A Reading List
Koritha Mitchell is is a public intellectual, a professor of English, a literary historian, an award-winning author and cultural critic, and as of last year she is also a member of the Hopkins Press Advisory Board. Her work has already had quite an impact both...
The Poe/tics of Reception: A Reading LIst
To accompany our podcast interview with Eliza Richards, Elissa Zellinger, and Kelly Ross about the forthcoming Poe Studies issue celebrating 20 years of Eliza Richards' Gender and the Poetics of Reception in Poe's Circle, we have assembled a Poe-focused...
The Public Health Crises Plaguing America's Prisons
How the failure to protect incarcerated people from infections has led to preventable outbreaks—and how public health professionals can make a difference.
Project MUSE and USHMM Launch New Landmark Initiative
(Washington, DC & Baltimore, MD) – Project MUSE, a division of Johns Hopkins University Press, in collaboration with the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum, announces today a new landmark in the Museum’s longstanding Encyclopedia of Camps and Ghettos...
The Ties That Bind: What Networks Reveal About Our World
The author of Dots and Lines shares a thought-provoking blog about the networks that connect us with each other and the world.
Kelley Squazzo Appointed Director of Project MUSE
Johns Hopkins University Press has appointed Kelley Squazzo as the new Director of Project MUSE, effective immediately. With 25 years of experience in scholarly and educational publishing, Kelley brings a dynamic vision, deep industry expertise, and an...
Top 20 Articles of April 2025
Our April Top 20 most-read journal articles list features a lot of exciting new pieces, including Cass R. Sunstein's introduction to the "Liberalism Under Siege" special issue of Social Research; a new poem by Mark Doty in Spiritus; and a new article by...
On The Path of Gratitude: East German Climbers in North Korea’s Diamond Mountains
We typically think of East Germans as isolated and sequestered behind the Berlin Wall. There is certainly much truth to this belief. Until 1989, East Germans’ ability to travel was severely restricted by communist authorities. But it is not the whole truth...
The Undead Walk, but Zombie Bugs Crawl
Zombies aren't just the stuff of nightmares. Join Rise of the Zombie Bugs author Mindy Weisberger in a conversation on the evolutionary quirks of zombifying parasites.
Top 20 Articles of March 2025
The stats are in, and here's what you were reading most from Hopkins Press journals in March 2025 through Project MUSE. Featuring long-time favorites from Journal of Democracy, Hispania, World Politics and Perspectives in Biology and Medicine and newer entries...