University of Idaho Department of English
The University of Idaho Press was founded in 1972 as the scholarly publisher of the University of Idaho, a land-grant university located in Idaho's panhandle. The program has expanded over the years and today, the UI Press is the largest press in Idaho, publishing eight to ten new titles a year and some reprints. To date, the Press has approximately ninety titles in print. Major genre published by the Press include Idaho, northern Rocky Mountains, and regional history; natural history of that area; Native American culture & history; mining history; Hemingway studies; ecological literary criticism; resource & policy studies; and literature of the west. The Press also co-publishes The Hemingway Review, with the Hemingway Society, a biannual journal featuring articles on the life and work of Ernest Hemingway, and the Native Plants Journal in conjunction with the UI Forest Research Nursery.
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University of Idaho Department of English
Vol. 20 (2000) through current issue
The Hemingway Review is published twice a year, in November and May, by The Hemingway Society and The University of Idaho Press. Averaging about 150 pages in length, each issue of the journal specializes in feature -length scholarly articles on the work and life of Ernest Hemingway, and also includes notes, book reviews, library information, and current bibliography. All critical approaches are welcome, including but not limited to historical, textual, biographical, source, and influence studies, as well as gender-based, multicultural, ecocritical, and other post-structuralist methods.