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Feminist Publishing at Routledge

Feminist Publishing at Routledge . Kimberly Guinta Acquisitions Editor, History Routledge. Review: Types of Scholarly Publishers. Textbook Develops books & materials for use in courses Sells books through adoptions to college instructors; gives away examination copies of key texts

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Feminist Publishing at Routledge

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  1. Feminist Publishing at Routledge Kimberly Guinta Acquisitions Editor, History Routledge

  2. Review: Types of Scholarly Publishers Textbook • Develops books & materials for use in courses • Sells books through adoptions to college instructors; gives away examination copies of key texts Academic press • Publishes scholarly books and journals, advanced-level textbooks • Sells books to libraries, individual scholars, graduate level adoptions; most have an examination policy more restricted than a textbook publisher’s

  3. Review: Types of Publishers University press • Publishes original scholarly work—sometimes includes journals or trade books • Sells primarily to libraries and individual scholars, with some advanced-level course adoptions; may sell through bookstores if topic is hot

  4. A Bit about Routledge • Imprint of Taylor & Francis Books • T&F part of Informa, PLC • Over 7,000 books on the backlist-publish over 1,000 books per year • Humanities and Social Sciences • Publish for researchers, libraries, classrooms

  5. Types of Routledge Books • Textbooks • Low-level • Advanced • Scholarly volumes • Research • Theory • Case studies • Hybrid Volumes

  6. Additional Types of Books • Edited anthologies • Handbooks • Academic references • Research resources • Practitioner references

  7. Some Routledge Backstory • William Germano • 1980/90s focus on cultural studies, race/class/gender • Other lists within Routledge absorbed the aesthetic • Change in publishing imperatives as the company changed

  8. Greatest Hits…

  9. Greatest Hits… • Gender Trouble, Judith Butler, 1989 1st ed. • Black Feminist Thought, Patricia Hill Collins, 1990 1st ed. • Reel to Real: Race, Sex, and Class at the Movies, bell hooks, 1996 • Radical Ecology: The Search for a Livable World, Carolyn Merchant, 1995 • Sex Wars: Sexual Dissent and Political Culture, Lisa Duggan & Nan D. Hunter, 1995 • Unequal Sisters, Vicki Ruiz & Ellen DuBois, 1989

  10. Now…

  11. Now… • Gender Trouble, Judith Butler, Routledge Classics, 2008 • Unequal Sisters, Ruiz/DuBois, 2008, 4th ed. • The Feminist History Reader, edited by Sue Morgan, 2006 • Women and Gender in Medieval Europe: An Encyclopedia, Margaret Schaus, 2006 • Feminist Thinkers and the Demands of Femininity, Lori Marso, 2006 • Beyond Bad Girls: Gender, Violence, and Hype, Meda Chesney-Lind & Katherine Irwin, 2007

  12. Routledge Research • For smaller, more selective studies • First books or higher level research • Library editions • Series: • Routledge Research in Gender and History • New Approaches in Sociology: Social Inequality, Social Change, and Social Justice (Nancy Naples, series editor) • Routledge Research in Gender and Society • Routledge/UNRISD Research in Gender and Development • Routledge International Studies of Women and Place (Janet Momsen & Jan Monk, series editors)

  13. Feminist Publishing at Routledge • A personal choice of a particular editor at any given time • Also governed by the market—race, class, and gender remain reliable themes (or not) • Projects must fit within one of the defined categories that we publish

  14. Some Considerations: Market • WHERE will the book be read? • Academic disciplines-other scholars in the field reading to keep up with new research • Professional arenas-practitioners reading for guidance or reference • General populace

  15. Some Considerations: Audience • WHO will read the book? • Students • Scholars • Researchers • Practitioners • Educated lay people

  16. Keeping Perspective • What other books have been written on the same topic? • Should we publish the book? Who else could publish it? • Who will read the book? • Who will BUY the book?

  17. Some Challenges • Competition from other presses • Are women’s issues feminist by default? • Market pressures-what sells? • Editors/staff who aren’t feminists

  18. Our Role • To keep women’s issues and gender as a broad category in the forefront of our scholarly publishing • To find innovative ways of packaging material to reach a course market and yet still remain on the leading edge in terms of content

  19. Thank you! Kimberly Guinta Routledge 270 Madison Ave. New York, NY 10016 kimberly.guinta@taylorandfrancis.com

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