Our books HOROS: Ancient Boundaries and the Ecology of Stone Read Thea Potter's blog post on her latest book 'Horos: Ancient Boundaries and the Ecology of Stone'.
Our books Why does the slave win? Plautus's Epidicus on the Roman Stage Read Dr Catherine Tracy's blog post on her latest Open Access title 'Epidicus by Plautus: An Annotated Latin Text, with a Prose Translation'.
OBP Newsletter OBP Autumn Newsletter 2021 Welcome to our Autumn Newsletter! We have information on our new open position, updates from COPIM, OABN and ScholarLed, events, new and forthcoming publications, latest reviews and more...Keep reading to find out more!
Our books ἱστορία and the κόσμος If you want to make the world a better place, if you care about justice and equality, if a life of curiosity and skepticism, lived with values, purpose, and reflection intrigues you, read on.
our authors On Open Access and Equity: Thoughts from our Authors For Open Access Week 2021 we invited our authors to share their thoughts on the topics of equity, accessibility, open knowledge and open access publishing. Continue reading to find out what they had to say.
Our books A Sacred Task Read William B. Bonvillian's reflections on the importance of publishing the research of his late brother John D. Bonvillian in Open Access.
our authors Burst the Frames: Open Access at the Dissertation Level Read this post about Open Access and digital dissertations by Anke Finger and Virginia Kuhn.
our authors Why Open Access? Read this post about equity, inclusivity and Open Access by Daniel Rueda Garrido.
German Literature A View From under The Horse’s Tail. New Perspectives on Literature? Read now Roger Paulin's reflections on his latest title 'From Goethe to Gundolf: Essays on German Literature and Culture'.
Russian Literature How To Read Russian Literature Backwards Did you know that Voltaire plagiarized Conan Doyle? Or that Shakespeare nicked T.S. Eliot’s best ideas? Plagiarism by anticipation is both quaintly ludicrous and unexpectedly fecund, overturning familiar notions of literary adaptation (and anxiety of influence).