Juliet McMullin and Brian Callender have joined Susan Merrill Squier as series editors for Penn State University Press’ Graphic Medicine series, which was founded in 2015 by Squier and Ian Williams. The series, which has previously included a mix of scholarly and general interest books, will now focus on scholarly monographs and edited collections by researchers in the health humanities, activists, and medical practitioners analyzing the ways in which comics address the scaled meanings of health.
Squier is Brill Professor Emerita of English and Women's, Gender, and Sexuality Studies at Penn State. She is a co-author of the Eisner-nominated book "Graphic Medicine Manifesto" and an Einstein Visiting Fellow at the Freie Universität Berlin.
McMullin is the author of "The Healthy Ancestor: Embodied Inequality and the Revitalization of Native Hawaiian Health" and co-editor of the School of Advanced Research volume "Confronting Cancer: Metaphors, Advocacy, and Anthropology." She is a professor of anthropology at the University of California, Riverside and the co-director of the Center for Health Disparities Research.
Callender is associate professor of medicine at the University of Chicago and the author of numerous published articles on graphic narrative in medicine, ethics and global health education.
Books in the Graphic Medicine series reflect the value of comics as a resource for communicating about medicine and health. They have received praise and scholarly citation from venues such as The New York Times, Science, the Journal of the American Medical Association (JAMA), Health Affairs, Medical Humanities, AU Magazine, HIV Plus, the Journal of Microbiology & Biology Education, the Journal of Reproductive and Infant Psychology, The Lancet, and NPR. Click here to learn more about the series.
https://www.psu.edu/news/university-libraries/story/psu-press-announces-new-editors-critically-acclaimed-graphic-medicine/

Features
Prof. Dan Holz features in New York Times article, How to Create a Black Hole Out of Thin Air
January 19, 2024
Prof. Daniel Holz discusses new research that shows black holes may form in different ways than expected

In the Media
Benoit Roux featured in article by Phys.org, Molecular pump study explores how brine shrimp thrive in high salinity
January 19, 2024
The article focuses on a study he conducted with multiple other scholars titled "A Na pump with reduced stoichiometry is upregulated by brine shrimp in extreme salinities""Features
Sarah Fredericks features in the Orlando Sentinel’s article, At ‘Climate Cafés,’ mental health experts and environmentalists create a community to tackle climate anxiety
January 11, 2024
Sarah Fredericks said deep shame can cause people to hide or retreat and become paralyzed, unable to act.

Features
Jordan Bimm features in CBC New’s article, SpaceX’s second launch of massive Starship postponed until Saturday
November 20, 2023
The attempt we saw last time back in April, the Starship failed to separate from the Super Heavy booster," said Jordan Bimm



Features
Kristine Palmieri Highlights Women Astronomers in New Article for Physics Today
November 06, 2023
In “They were astronomers,” IFK postdoctoral researcher Kristine Palmieri presents the vibrant history of women workers at UChicago’s Yerkes Observatory in the early twentieth century.
In the Media
Eric Oliver features in Salom’s article What if they’re not crazy? Belief in conspiracy theories may be normal
October 26, 2023

Features
Big Brains Podcast: What Ripples in Space-Time Tell Us About the Universe with Daniel Holz
October 10, 2023
UChicago cosmologist discusses discovery of gravitational waves and colliding black holes.
