NEW
PUBLISHING MODEL PRESERVES AND EXPANDS LEADING WOMEN'S STUDIES
WEBSITE
[Print Version/PDF]
FOR
IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Contact: Jennifer Heffelfinger
Alexander Street Press, LLC
jheffelfinger@alexanderstreet.com
800-889-5937 ext. 5
(October 3, 2003 – Alexandria, VA) Earlier this year,
Women and Social Movements, a top website in Women’s Studies
with over 30,000 visits per month, was facing a dilemma: how
could they continue to expand the valuable resources on their
site despite the end of their funding? The solution: a dramatic
new way of working with publishers. Alexander Street Press and
scholars at SUNY Binghamton’s Center for the Historical
Study of Women and Gender have teamed up to find a new collaborative
model for keeping the award-winning Women and Social Movements
website alive.
Professors Thomas Dublin and Kathryn Kish Sklar launched one
of the most heavily visited women’s studies websites in
the world six years ago, and kept it growing with a series of
grants. Like many websites dedicated to research and scholarship,
the end of the grants threatened to end or immobilize the project.
But, with a commercial hand from Alexander Street Press, and
funds generated by a larger, subscription-based version of the
site, Women and Social Movements will not only continue, but
take on new form.
Dublin explains, “Alexander Street was an ideal match
for us. We share a commitment to giving voice to the unheard.
And, Alexander Street’s Semantic Indexing™ enables
us to offer much deeper access to our materials.” Stephen
Rhind-Tutt, president of Alexander Street, added, “When
we saw the SUNY site, we knew that it had to be rescued. The
document projects, introductions, bibliographies, Dictionary
of Social Movements, lesson plans, and other features are exquisite,
and all lent themselves to our production features. We’re
thrilled to launch this as the first of what we hope will be
many such publisher-scholar collaborations for us.”
Historians Dublin and Sklar will remain the editors of Women
and Social Movements, and their editorial board of fourteen scholars
from across the country will assist in creating new document
projects and selecting additional primary sources for the site.
In addition, a large portion of the materials on the existing
site will remain freely available after the launch of the subscription-based
version.
Women and Social Movements in the United States: 1600 to 2000
will be launched on October 15, when Alexander Street Press opens
its servers to libraries, research organizations, and media from
all over the world to enjoy 90 days of free and open access.
Please visit http://womhist.binghamton.edu or http://alexanderstreet.com for more information. On January 15, 2004, access will again
be limited to subscribers. Orders received before January 1,
2004 will receive an extra 3 free months of access at no additional
charge.
For more information on the project, please contact Jennifer
Heffelfinger, Manager of Marketing and Public Relations at 800-889-5937,
ext. 5 or by email, jheffelfinger@alexanderstreet.com.
AWARDED *BEST CONTENT* AND *BEST CONTRACT OPTIONS*
THE CHARLESTON
ADVISOR'S 2003 READER'S CHOICE AWARDS
Alexander Street Press, L.L.C., is an academic publisher of
electronic full-text databases in the humanities and social sciences.
Founded in June 2000, the company publishes collections in history,
literature, women’s studies, sociology, ethnic and diversity
studies, popular culture, film studies, the arts, and other areas.
Alexander Street Press is located in Alexandria, Virginia.
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