A recently published book from Clemson University Press was featured on the “New Books in Music” podcast, part of the New…
Ronald Moran could be considered the father of the Clemson University Press. Even though he had already retired from the…
January 28, 2022 marks the 83rd anniversary of the death of W. B. Yeats in 1939. The anniversary nearly coincides…
Using the paradox of freedom and confinement to frame the ways travel represented both opportunity and restriction for African Americans, Freedom…
In celebration of the 10th anniversary of the Association of University Presses, the 2021 University Press Week theme “Keep UP”…
In this blog post Adam Nemmers, author of American Modern(ist) Epic: Novels to Found a Nation, introduces the genre of…
Sam Aleckson was the pen name for Samuel Williams, a man born into slavery in Charleston, South Carolina, who wrote…
Excavating Exodus charts Black writers’ shifting conceptions of Moses from self-sacrificing leader to authoritarian figure. In this blog post, author…
Clemson University Press is a learning lab for students, who gain hands-on, professional experience in editing, design, and marketing. Students…
Writing the Survivor by Robin Field explores how rape novels place survivors at the heart of narratives of sexual violence…
Modern Writers, Transnational Literatures examines W. B. Yeats’s and Rabindranath Tagore’s literary engagements with identity, nationalism, and the literary and…
The Converse Low Residency MFA in Creative Writing and Clemson University Press are pleased to announce the winners of the…
Clemson books are broadly reviewed in scholarly journals, in the newsletters of author societies, and in the popular press. We…
Converse College and Clemson University Press are pleased to announce a publishing collaboration in conjunction with the low-residency Master of…
In The Rebel Cafe is a collection of interviews with Ed Sanders, constituting a career biography of Sanders as a…
Gendered Ecologies considers the value of interrelationships that exist among human, nonhuman species, and inanimate objects as part of the…
2020 marks the 100 year anniversary of John Dos Passos’s first published novel, One Man’s Initiation: 1917. In this blog…
John Dressler is the author of Granville Bantock (1868 – 1946). The book is the first reference guide to musical,…
The Robert Frost Review is a peer-reviewed annual publication founded by The Robert Frost Society in 1978 to promote scholarship…
Clemson University Press announces a new book series, Eighteenth-Century Moments, under the editorship of Greg Clingham. As director of Bucknell…
Clemson University Press is an experiential-learning lab for student interns and graduate assistants, who gain hands-on, professional experience in editing,…
Clemson books are broadly reviewed in scholarly journals, in the newsletters of author societies, and in the popular press. We…
Rob Doggett, Professor and Chair of English at SUNY Geneseo, is the new general editor of International Yeats Studies, an…
We’re pleased to offer 50% off all ebooks, when ordered directly from our partners at Liverpool University Press. Ebook purchases…
Thanks to all who attended the book launch for Winter Tree Identification. Between 11 a.m. and 4 p.m. on Saturday, January…
Thanks to all who attended the book launch for Winter Tree Identification. Between 11 a.m. and 4 p.m. on Saturday, January…
Come learn about winter tree identification from the people who wrote the book. This recently published field guide is a…
Come learn about winter tree identification from the people who wrote the book. This recently published field guide is a…
In celebration of University Press Week (November 3–9, 2019), we’re highlighting the collaboration, learning, and community behind a recent publication,…
Download a PDF of our 2019/2020 fall/winter catalog here.
Jeremy Diaper’s “T. S. Eliot and Organicism” was reviewed in the May 7, 2019 issue of “The Times Literary Supplement.”
From the review: “‘A Scientific Companion to Robert Frost’ will help scholars and students alike see new dimensions in Frost’s poetry.”
Preview forthcoming books and discover titles from our newly repackaged back list.
Volumes 10–13 (2001–2018) are available for the first time via most online retailers and through our online store.
District III is one of the most competitive districts in the country, with universities from North Carolina, Virginia, South Carolina, Georgia and Florida among the contenders.
Donald Pizer’s “Theodore Dreiser Recalled” and Donald Pizer, Lisa Nanney, and Richard Layman’s “The Paintings and Drawings of John Dos Passos” garner high praise.
“Highly recommended”
“‘Theodore Dreiser Recalled’ in a must-read…”
Reznicek’s debut monograph “represents an exciting shift in gear for Irish Studies.”
Alec Marsh reviews “Fascist Directive” in “American Literary Scholarship”
The 2018 Clemson University Press catalog is now available for download.
Marguérite Corporaal praised Matthew Reznicek’s “The European Metropolis” in her recent review in “H-France Review.”
The renowned poet and broadcaster Grace Cavalieri recently interviewed the author of “A Scientific Companion to Robert Frost” for her podcast, “The Poet and the Poem,” from the Library of Congress.
To mark the first anniversary since the publication of “The European Metropolis,” we caught up with Matthew Reznicek to discuss how Irish women writers living and working in Paris in the nineteenth century re-drew the map of Irish literature.
As per Emma Murray: “’In Vulgar Latin, Lace means entice, / ensnare.’ Poet Margot Douaihy and scratchboard illustrator Bri Hermanson do just that with Scranton Lace: Poems.”
The author of Tastes of Clemson Blue Cheese will sign books and celebrate the book’s publication.
The reception will be held at the Carolina Music Museum in Greenville.
In light of the planned demolition and redevelopment of The Lace factory in Scranton, Pennsylvania, we caught up with the creative duo behind “Scranton Lace” to discuss if this recent news conditions or alters how they view their book and collaboration.
The award will honor the most persuasive seminar paper presented by an early-career scholar.
To celebrate the release of volume 1 of “Readings in ‘The Cantos,'” we caught up with Richard Parker to discuss the gestation of Ezra Pound’s greatest work and the virtues of including multiple critical approaches in a single volume.
Virginia Smith, author of A Scientific Companion to Robert Frost (Clemson, July 2018) will lecture on “Robert Frost: Farmer-Poet-Scientist.”
Alisa Miller’s “Rupert Brooke in the First World War” was reviewed in the June 22, 2018 issue of “The Times Literary Supplement.”
A recent feature by Alison Mero explains the Press’s contributions to academic life on campus and its role in the University’s research culture.
To mark the publication of Virginia Woolf and the World of Books, we caught up with Nicola Wilson and Claire Battershill to discuss the innovations and successes of Virginia and Leonard Woolf’s Hogarth Press and how it may have contributed to modern-day independent publishing.
Paul’s study is praised as a welcome addition to Pound Studies “but with an interdisciplinary value far beyond it.”
The Council for Advancement and Support of Education has awarded Clemson a grand gold for “Eclipse Over Clemson.”
Golden Tiger Reunion participants received gratis copies of “Tales of Clemson.”
Gregory Castle, author of “Modernism and the Celtic Revival” (Cambridge), reviewed “Yeats, Philosophy, and the Occult” in “International Yeats Studies.”
There was even a custom cocktail to mark the occasion: the Scranton Sling!
Chef Thormose, author of “Tastes of Clemson Blue Cheese,” recently appeared on “Your Carolina with Jack & Megan”
The Community of Literary Magazines and Presses recently spotlighted The South Carolina Review on its social media accounts and popular blog.
Read the full, open-access review by Keith Cushman.
“Roberts’s fine-tuned critical savvy will delight both the lay reader and the D. H. Lawrence specialist.”
Sam Wiseman’s monograph was recently featured in “The Year’s Work in English Studies”
The Yeats Annual reviews “Yeats, Philosophy, and the Occult” (Clemson, 2017)
Our managing editor addressed the role of regional publishers in public-music discourse in South Carolina during a round table at a recent conference in the state’s capital.
Watch the breathtaking video trailer for Margot Douaihy and Bri Hermanson’s “Scranton Lace.”
To celebrate the release of “Rupert Brooke in the First World War,” we caught up with Alisa Miller to discuss the poetry of the First World War and the life behind the man who wrote “The Soldier.”
Jim Melvin and Wanda Johnson were interviewed on December 19 about Eclipse Over Clemson on Your Carolina with Jack & Megan.
“Useful to those who are not content with commonplace words and phrases, [the Companion is] a great example of how to deepen a complex character like Pound, who was fascist and Muslinian but above all a confused and patriotic American pacifist. . . . [The] contents of the Guide to Kulchur are carefully examined and explained, word by word, by this precious Companion.”
Virginia Smith discussed her forthcoming book, A Scientific Companion to Robert Frost, at the Stone House Museum in Shaftsbury, Vermont.
Margot Douaihy sat down with Mass Poetry to discuss her forthcoming collection with Clemson, Scranton Lace.
A forthcoming book from Clemson attracted national and international media coverage during the total solar eclipse.
A forthcoming book from Clemson attracted national and international media coverage during the total solar eclipse.
Ron Rash spoke with NPR’s Here and Now about the poem commissioned for Eclipse Over Clemson, a commemorative book forthcoming from Clemson University Press.
Donald Pizer, co-author of The Paintings and Drawings of John Dos Passos, has written a short essay on the origins of the book for the Dos Passos Society newsletter.
Margot Douaihy and Bri Hermanson, poet and illustrator of Scranton Lace (forthcoming) were interviewed this week by PBS News Hour.
Susan Harlan’s “My First Name,” a poem in the spring 2017 issue (49.2) of The South Carolina Review went viral in March.
A NYC-based jury has selected one of Bri Hermanson’s illustrations from Margot Douaihy’s forthcoming poetry collection Scranton Lace: Poems (Clemson, 2017) as an Edition 36 illustration highlight in American Illustration and American Photography (AI-AP).
The Paintings and Drawings of John Dos Passos: A Collection and Study (Clemson, 2016), by Donald Pizer, Lisa Nanney, and Richard Layman was featured on the back cover of the March 24, 2017 issue of The Times Literary Supplement.
As of the fall 2017 issue, Keith Lee Morris will assume the General Editorship of The South Carolina Review.
Edited by Nancy M. Grace (The College of Wooster) and Ronna C. Johnson (Tufts University), the new series will bring recognition to the decades of serious scholarship devoted to Beat writing.
Select Clemson University Press books are now available on JStor
Ronald Moran’s Eye of the World (Clemson University Press, 2016) was recently lauded in Colby Magazine.
Haki Madhubuti gave a reading at Clemson’s 10th Annual Literary Festival. The reading was co-sponsored by The South Carolina Review (published by Clemson University Press).
“Those unfamiliar with Lawrence’s life will be fascinated by the biographical details, because Lawrence’s romantic life—which the author often immortalized in his writing—was certainly scandalous for the time.”
Welcome, Alison!
Clemson University Press launches the International Yeats Studies.
David Ellis’s “Love & Sex in D. H. Lawrence” reviewed in the Times Literary Supplement.
Congratulations to Margot Douaihy on the nomination of Girls Like You for a Lambda Literary Award!
The South Carolina review is featured in the current issue of Sapling.
Congratulations to Kathryn Kirkpatrick, winner of the Brockman-Campbell Prize for Her Small Hands Were Not Beautiful!
Liverpool University Press, our overseas partner, was named the 2015 Bookseller Industry Award at the Frankfurt Book Fair.
Watch the stunning video trailer for Margot Douaihy’s Girls Like You.
Announcing the new partnership between Clemson University Press and Liverpool University Press.