Penn State University Press announces new books and journals for Fall/Winter 2020

By: Cate Fricke

Penn State University Press has unveiled its Fall/Winter 2020 catalog featuring new general interest and scholarly books in the fields of American history, literature, art history, religious
studies, rhetoric and communication, medieval and early modern studies, animal studies, and more.

Penn State Press cover art Notable forthcoming titles include A Pre-Columbian Bestiary: Fantastic Creatures of Indigenous Latin America, a whimsical compendium of imaginary and mythical Latin American beasts by Ilan Stavans, with vivid illustrations by Eko; The First Inauguration: George Washington and the Invention of the Republic by Stephen Howard Browne, Penn State Liberal Arts Professor of Communication Arts and Sciences; The Objects That Remain, a poignant memoir by Laura Levitt that explores how physical objects inform our understanding of trauma; and Menopause: A Comic Treatment, a collection of hilarious and insightful comics on hot flashes and much more, edited by MK Czerwiec.

Scholarly highlights include Deportable and Disposable: Public Rhetoric and the Making of the “Illegal” Immigrant by Lisa A. Flores, an important look at the history of language used to describe Mexican immigrants; Designing a New Tradition: Loïs Mailou Jones and the Aesthetics of Blackness, an exploration of the art and legacy of African American artist Loïs Mailou Jones
by Rebecca VanDiver; Robert de Reims: Songs and Motets, a critical edition of the work of the thirteenth-century French “trouvère,” edited and translated by Eglal Doss-Quinby, Gaël Saint-Cricq, and Samuel N. Rosenberg; and On Transhumanism, an essential and clarifying volume by noted metahumanist philosopher Stefan Lorenz Sorgner.

The Fall/Winter 2020 catalog also includes new titles in ancient Near Eastern and biblical studies from Eisenbrauns, which the Press acquired as an imprint in November 2017, and new journals
now available from PSU Press such as The Langston Hughes Review and Studies in the American Short Story. The Press is also pleased to release Field Language: The Painting and Poetry of Warren and Jane Rohrer, a publication of the Palmer Museum of Art that marks the occasion of a retrospective exhibition devoted to the working relationship between abstract painter Warren Rohrer and his wife, poet Jane Turner Rohrer.

To see all of Penn State University Press’s forthcoming Fall/Winter 2020 titles, visit
http://www.psupress.org/catalogs/PDFs/FW20_web.pdf