Open Humanities Press Explained

Open Humanities Press should not be confused with Open Library of Humanities.

Open Humanities Press
Founded:2006
Founder:Paul Ashton, Gary Hall, Sigi Jöttkandt and David Ottina
Country:United Kingdom
Headquarters:London
Publications:Books, Journals
Topics:Humanities

Open Humanities Press is an international open access publishing initiative in the humanities, specializing in critical and cultural theory. OHP's editorial board includes scholars like Alain Badiou, Jonathan Culler, Stephen Greenblatt, Jean-Claude Guédon, Graham Harman, J. Hillis Miller, Antonio Negri, Peter Suber and Gayatri Spivak, among others.

From 2010-2015, Open Humanities Press collaborated with the University of Michigan Library's MPublishing branch to fund the production of monographs. Open Humanities Press is currently collaborating in a similar way with the Main Library (University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign).

History

The Open Humanities Press (OHP) is a scholar-led publishing initiative founded by Paul Ashton (Australia), Gary Hall (UK), Sigi Jöttkandt (Australia) and David Ottina (US). Its aim is to raise awareness of open access publishing in the humanities and to provide promotional and technical support to open access journals that have been invited by OHP's editorial oversight group to join the collective.

OHP launched in May 2008 with seven open access journals and was named a "beacon of hope" by the Public Library of Science.[1] In August, 2009 OHP announced it will begin publishing open access book series edited by senior members of OHP's board.

Works

Books

The monograph series are:

Journals

Open Humanities Press also hosts several open access journals, including the following:

See also

Further reading

Notes and References

  1. http://www.plos.org/cms/comment/reply/219/