It’s officially publication day!!
Posts by Stephen Shapiro
The DOI works using the resolver at dx.doi.org and using the REST API it has a timestamp from this morning. dx.doi.org/doiRA/10.135... says its a Crossref DOI. Is there a delay before it appears on Crossref's site?
(This is my first time looking "inside" a DOI, so I may not understand the process)
A good summary of the latest wave of book promotion scams
picture of People without History Are Dust with the JBC logo
I am thrilled to have received the @jewishbookcouncil.bsky.social in category "Holocaust" for People without History Are Dust. My book was shortlisted alongside books by colleagues whom I respect and whom I have been reading since I was a young student.
I actually did request a table in the introduction of a politics/history manuscript recently, but it was an unusual situation.
Shop our 125th Anniversary Sale!
Save 40% to 75% off a wide range of University of Toronto Press titles, from award-winning scholarship to nonfiction reader favourites.
Shop the sale until Feb 15: bit.ly/UTP125SALE
#NonfictionBooks #NonfictionReads #BookSale #UniversityPress #AcademicBooks
Coming to #MLA26 in Toronto this week? Come by the @uoftpress.bsky.social booth to see our newest titles. If you want to meet to discuss a book project in German, Eastern European, or Eurasian literary studies, send me an e-mail.
I think authors sometimes second-guess themselves by trying to name people whose (positive) opinion they think would impress their editor. We mostly already know those names.
These names are a chance to tell your editor whose (anonymous) feedback would make a difference to you and your writing.
In case you haven’t seen it, today we posted our fascinating interview with Douglas Pretsell on Urning: Queer Identity in the German Nineteenth Century.
Read the full interview here: wp.me/p6JJ6S-4Px
1/3
#historyofsexuality #Germanhistory
Lecture title, speaker name, and lecture time/date/location info on a poster, all of which is available on the website for the event.
QR code for the online registration for those interested attending via zoom.
UBC Queer and Trans German Studies is hosting Andrea Rottmann (FU Berlin) as the next Tobin Distinguished Lecture in Queer and Trans German Studies! The event will take place in person at UBC as well as online. We would be grateful if you could pass the announcement on to your networks.
Congratulations!
My book launch @dependencybonn.de on June 12 follows by a reception!! See you if you are around.
It's always so exciting to see how the field of Central Asian studies is shaping. But for this particular book, I've been waiting for Stawkowski's study for a long time since we first almost coincided at ASEES almost a decade ago.
I knew of Magdalena's fieldwork
utppublishing.com/doi/10.3138/...
Excited to be headed to the book expo at Congress 2025 on Monday #congreSSH @federationhss.ca. If you want to talk about titles in history or European and Eurasian studies, send me an email or drop by the @uoftpress.bsky.social booth
Cardboard box open to reveal two stacks of the same book. The cover of the book has a backdrop the colour of a green carnation, with two colourised photos showing the same individual in two different exposures, one in masculine-coded clothing from the early 20th century, and one in feminine-coded clothing. On the left the individual is wearing a suit coloured mid-blue with a white starched collar and purple tie and waistcoat and a black hat. On the right the individual is wearing a pink overcoat with wide sleeves over a light-blue blouse and a purple skirt, as well as a purple broad-brimmed hat with a blue ribbon. The text at the top reads MAGNUS HIRSCHFELD/Translated and with an afterword by James J. Conway/BERLIN’S THIRD SEX
Receiving fresh copies of a book you’ve worked on – it never gets tired. Berlin‘s Third Sex by Magnus Hirschfeld, published by @uoftpress.bsky.social
Today, ACLS announced the finalists for the 2025 ACLS Open Access Book Prizes and Arcadia Open Access Publishing Awards: bit.ly/3Fr4PA3
These $50,000 prizes recognize and reward the authors and publishers of exceptional, innovative, and open access humanities books published from 2018 to 2023.
The European Accessibility Act goes into effect in June. Publishers selling digital products. such as e-books, in the EU must ensure their products meet accessibility standards. Mary Lui explains for #FeedingTheElephant what authors and publishers need to know.
➡️ networks.h-net.org/group/discus...
A book cover with a backdrop the colour of a green carnation, with two colourised photos showing an individual in two different exposures, one in masculine-coded clothing from the early 20th century, and one in feminine-coded clothing. On the left the individual is wearing a suit coloured mid-blue with a white starched collar and purple tie and waistcoat and a black hat. On the right the individual is wearing a pink overcoat with wide sleeves over a light-blue blouse and a purple skirt, as well as a purple broad-brimmed hat with a blue ribbon. The text at the top reads MAGNUS HIRSCHFELD/Translated and with an afterword by James J. Conway/BERLIN’S THIRD SEX
The cover of the book Berlin’s Third Sex by Magnus Hirschfeld with the original German title in old script enclosed by a wild cat with a garland below it in green and black, all against a pink-beige background.
It was on this day that Magnus Hirschfeld was born (1868) and died (1935), so it’s a good time to tell you my translation of his utterly groundbreaking 1904 study of sexuality and gender, “Berlin’s Third Sex”, has just been reissued by @uoftpress.bsky.social. This is also good timing because … 🧵
Going to the Canadian Association of Slavists conference in Edmonton next week? So am I.
Want to talk about a book project? Send me an e-mail and we can find a time to chat (I won't have a book exhibit)
Congratulations!
Honestly, it feels like the ostensible request here is never what actually gets attention. It's either reversion to the status quo with a big for-profit multi-national or a radical structural shift.
If a for-profit provider is an issue, there are even multiple non-profit platforms that offer perpetual access. And have for decades. One of them offers it even if you cancel all your ongoing agreements with them! Another permits local archiving for use if you no longer have an agreement.
Reading yet another opinion piece on the Clarivate pivot-to-subscriptions and it's starting to get to me. May I humbly suggest, even if just a short-term measure, mentioning that you can spend your money with publishers and platforms that *do* offer perpetual access?
Importantly, Clarivate left themselves a substantial fallback position. Their Rialto platform still lets libraries do perpetual access purchases on sites other than Ebook Central. According to the Rialto website, that's 23 sites, some of which are multi-publisher platforms themselves. /2
Not to be flip, but its probably a bit of both. Very few presses are large enough to pick only one platform/strategy. That's one reason the Clarivate/ProQuest decision to drop non-subscription acquisitions on Ebook Central made such waves. /1
Publishing's not a bad fit for HSS graduate students, but these articles are always about books/journals, rather than being the copy-editor for the state lottery and gaming commission (the instructor in my c/e class) or proofreader for financial marketing collateral (my first freelance gig)
Folks, we started a journal! Send us your articles and reviews about queer culture in Central and Eastern Europe!
New ebook storefront, associated with Bookshop.org.
Interesting that's it'll pull from a non-Ingram source too (unless I'm missing something about Draft2Digital)