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Penn State University Press was founded in 1956 and publishes around 100 new monographs and more than 60 journals per year with a focus on the humanities and social sciences. The Press is best known for areas of scholarship in art history, medieval studies, Latin American studies, rhetoric and communication, religious studies, and graphic medicine.

Subjects
Reinventing World War II Popular Memory in the Rise of the Ethnonationalist State Barbara A. Biesecker
Gender Violence, Art, and the Viewer An Intervention Ellen C. Caldwell, Cynthia S. Colburn, Ella J. Gonzalez
Facing Images Medieval Japanese Art and the Problem of Modernity Kristopher W. Kersey
Cartographies of Exclusion Anti-Semitic Mapping in Medieval England Asa Simon Mittman
Disenchanting Albert the Great The Life and Afterlife of a Medieval Magician David J. Collins, S. J.
The Declaration in Script and Print A Visual History of America’s Founding Document John Bidwell
Christians at Home John Chrysostom and Domestic Rituals in Fourth-Century Antioch Blake Leyerle
Saint George Between Empires Image and Encounter in the Medieval East Heather A. Badamo
Napoleon Sarony’s Living Pictures The Celebrity Photograph in Gilded Age New York Erin Pauwels
Speaking Words of Wisdom The Beatles and Religion Michael McGowan
Israel’s Day of Light and Joy The Origin, Development, and Enduring Meaning of the Jewish Sabbath Jon D. Levenson
The Letter from Prison Literature of Cultural Resistance in Early Modern England W. Clark Gilpin
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