Johns Hopkins University Press Celebrates Open Access Week by Releasing 100 Out-of-Print Titles Online for Free
From Johns Hopkins University Press:
Johns Hopkins University Press is marking International Open Access Week this week with the release of 100 newly digitized open access books, including many seminal works by distinguished scholars that have been unavailable in recent years. The works are accessible for free through Project MUSE, the massive online collection of scholarship based at Johns Hopkins, which now offers opportunities for publishers to host free and open access content.
“We are thrilled that these first one hundred books are now available again to readers around the world,” said JHU Press director Barbara Kline Pope. “The opportunity to make this important work open and accessible for free is a significant extension of our mission to deliver scholarship to readers everywhere. We are grateful to Mellon, the NEH, and to our OA team across JHUP.”
Led by editorial director Greg Britton, the Press’s Encore Editions open access project has been a significant undertaking developed in partnership with the Johns Hopkins Sheridan Libraries. Editors at the Press worked closely with collections specialists at the Sheridan Libraries to review thousands of out-of-print works that have been difficult or impossible to access. Once titles were selected, JHU Press staff member Will Krause worked to clear publishing rights with authors or their estates and to orchestrate the process of digitizing and relaunching the books. Other staff members assisted with design, production, and plans for marketing the new editions.
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Titles include:
- Essays in the History of Ideas, by A. O. Lovejoy
- The Thirteen Pragmatisms, by A. O. Lovejoy
- The Reason, the Understanding, and the Time, by A. O. Lovejoy
- The Beginnings of National Politics: An Interpretive History of the Continental Congress, by Jack Rakove
- Jane Austen Among Women, by Deborah Kaplan
- The Men of the First French Republic, by Alison Patrick
In 2020, the Press will release additional titles including Imagining Consumers, a ground-breaking study of American consumer society by Regina Blaszczyk, and Figural Realism: Studies in the Mimesis Effect, a collection of essays concerned with history in critical discourse by Hayden White.
The Encore Editions from JHU Press join a growing collection of open access and free content available from a variety of non-profit publishers on Project MUSE. A 2016 grant from the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation allowed MUSE to launch a new digital platform built on HTML5, which is capable of delivering open access content in a highly-discoverable and adaptable format. This digital platform represents a major step forward in open access publishing in the humanities, which has traditionally relied on static PDFs.
Learn More, Read the Complete Announcement
Direct to Complete List/Links to All Encore Edition Titles
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About Gary Price
Gary Price (gprice@gmail.com) is a librarian, writer, consultant, and frequent conference speaker based in the Washington D.C. metro area. He earned his MLIS degree from Wayne State University in Detroit. Price has won several awards including the SLA Innovations in Technology Award and Alumnus of the Year from the Wayne St. University Library and Information Science Program. From 2006-2009 he was Director of Online Information Services at Ask.com.