Project MUSE

@ProjectMUSE

Project MUSE offers digital full-text access to humanities and social science scholarship from leading university presses and scholarly publishers.

Baltimore, MD, USA
Joined January 2009

Tweets

You blocked @ProjectMUSE

Are you sure you want to view these Tweets? Viewing Tweets won't unblock @ProjectMUSE

  1. Pinned Tweet
    Sep 29

    Scholars, publishers, librarians & friends of all kinds, after a pause due to the pandemic, we’ve launched our 25th anniversary website w/ 25 MUSE Makers, a timeline of memorable moments, a new & a very vibrant video! Discover! Explore! MUSE!

    Undo
  2. 12 hours ago

    Did you know Project MUSE is constantly adding new journals? Discover new journal titles on MUSE -

    Undo
  3. Retweeted
    15 hours ago

    The plays of Sarah Ruhl flip the American household drama on its head. In MD 63.3, author explores Ruhl’s plays to show how, through the lens of , sets are used to undercut the traditional family. Now on :

    Undo
  4. Retweeted
    Nov 20

    The latest issue of the Toronto Journal of Theology celebrates the 50th anniversary of the ! Read new articles and book reviews on in TJT 36.2. UTPJ Online: :

    Undo
  5. Retweeted
    Nov 20

    The latest issue of CJILS is on ! Issue 43.2 features articles on fiction as a source of information on sexuality, the role of in public spaces, user participation in public , and more!

    Undo
  6. Retweeted
    Nov 20

    This is the final weekend of our Fall Sale. If you're in the UK or Europe, head to and use coupon code FALL2020 to save. Shipping times and costs will be much better.

    Undo
  7. Nov 20
    Undo
  8. Nov 20

    We wish we could meet in person at , but you can always explore & discover a wide array of journals, along with 1000s of & ebooks & articles from a wide range of publishers.

    Undo
  9. Nov 20

    In pursuit of sperm whales, the American whaler Essex is sunk 1820 after getting rammed off coast of South America. The story inspired Melville's novel Moby Dick 1851. w/ a book from & tnx! & -

    Undo
  10. Retweeted
    Nov 19

    in 1863, delivered the . The brief speech at the dedication of a soldiers cemetery recast the Civil War as a test of whether the nation could live up to its promises of liberty and equality.

    Undo
  11. Nov 19

    While we can't meet in person at , offers 1000s of & ebooks, articles & ejournals from a wide range of publishers. Here is just one among many with over 50 titles! -

    Undo
  12. Nov 19

    We wish we could meet in person at , but you can always explore & discover a wide array of journals, along with 1000s of & ebooks & articles from a wide range of publishers.

    Undo
  13. Nov 19

    While we can't meet in person at , offers 1000s of & ebooks, articles & ejournals from a wide range of publishers. Here is just one among many with over 50 titles! -

    Undo
  14. Nov 19

    Did you know Project MUSE is constantly adding new journals? Discover new journal titles on MUSE -

    Undo
  15. Nov 19

    Search. Explore. MUSE!

    Show this thread
    Undo
  16. Nov 19

    How did the process of studying, writing, and delivering speeches help Lincoln develop the ideas with which he would so profoundly change history? 1863 he gave his Gettysburg Address - tnx! & - w/ -

    Undo
  17. Nov 19

    While we can't meet in person at , offers 1000s of & ebooks, articles & ejournals from a wide range of publishers. Here is just one among many with over 50 titles! -

    Show this thread
    Undo
  18. Retweeted
    Nov 18

    As colleges and universities lurch a spring semester, it’s worth checking out and ’s seminal LOW-DENSITY UNIVERSITY: 15 SCENARIOS FOR HIGHER ED—available here for free on :

    Undo
  19. Nov 18

    Canadian poet, novelist, lit critic, essayist, teacher & environmental activist; Margaret Eleanor Atwood, born 1939! To celebrate, we have a FREE intro essay from -

    Undo
  20. Retweeted
    Nov 18

    You can Assuming Innocence: The Ingénue's Satire in Frances Burney's /Evelina/ by Lillian Lu

    Undo
  21. Retweeted

    Now available via : Kathleen Kirsch's "Reconsidering the Monsters of Prudentius's Psychomachia" from the latest issue of Journal of Late Antiquity :

    Image Credit By Josep Renalias - Own work, CC BY-SA 3.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=3249772
    Undo

Loading seems to be taking a while.

Twitter may be over capacity or experiencing a momentary hiccup. Try again or visit Twitter Status for more information.

    You may also like

    ·