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Palgrave Macmillan: Humanities update

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The Link
By: Guest contributor, Fri Mar 16 2018

A letter from the Editors: Victoria Peters and Felicity Plester

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Author: Guest contributor

Victoria Peters and Felicity Plester are the Editorial Directors for the Humanities at Palgrave Macmillan.

What a busy and productive year we have had in Palgrave Humanities! We have published several hundred new titles to serve the academic humanities community globally, including a wide range of comprehensive and innovative titles in our Palgrave Handbooks series – from Jeremy Tambling’s , to Melanie Ilic’s , and our first ever Handbook on our theatre studies list - , edited by Laura MacDonald and William Everett. We have reinforced our position as publisher of primary texts by key philosophers, with a new collection of the texts of Foucault’s lectures (Foucault, ) and the highly reviewed  by Luce Irigaray. Other attention-grabbing highlights of 2017 were Sexton’s  and , edited by Renton and Gidley. 

Victoria Peters © Victoria Peters
And we are very proud to have picked up some impressive prizes along the way, having won Children’s Literature Association Book Award with Clare Bradford’s . To name a few others – and there are many -  Bolton & Wright (eds.),  won Best Edited Collection at BAFTSS; Royona Mitra’s book  won the first-ever Dance Studies Association first book award;  won CILIP Knowledge and information Management Group Information Resources (Print) Award 2017; Kuukaanen’s was awarded the 2016 ICHTH Book Prize for Historical Theory and Historiography;  Alison Stone’s  received the 2017 Outstanding Publication Award from the Popular Music Interest Group, and Tomás Irish’s  won the History of Education Society’s Kevin Brehony Prize. 

We have very well established lists across the range of history, literature, philosophy, film, media and cultural studies and theatre and performance studies, carefully shaped and curated by dedicated editors, with the help of many brilliant series editors, over the years. .  Our editors are constantly creating new series and clusters of new titles in emerging areas, especially those that are at the intersections of disciplines within the humanities and beyond – for example we are working on signing new titles in literary animal studies, animal ethics, music and literature, Wittgenstein studies, gaming studies, visual culture and applied theatre…so expect to see more from us in those areas and more over the next couple of years. 
 
You may have seen us at some of the many academic conferences we have attended during the year all over the world or come to one of our events, like the TORCH (Oxford Centre for Research in the Humanities) publishing workshop we ran for early career researchers, or our Palgrave commissioning surgery ran in our own building in London earlier in the year as part of Academic  Book Week. We also run our , and are proud to be part once again of the Being Human Festival (run by the School of Advanced Study at University of London) hosting  an exciting session on Voices Lost and Found, featuring  a cross-disciplinary group of our own authors speaking on a range of themes relating the 50 year anniversary of the Decriminalization of Homosexuality in the United Kingdom. 

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Author: Guest contributor

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