The is pleased to announce the publication of a new issue of the Journal of Mediterranean Studies, which is published on the Project Muse (Johns Hopkins University Press) platform and in print edition. Issue 31.1 of the journal features an intriguing line-up of contributions that put forward cutting-edge insight on the Mediterranean across an interdisciplinary and intersectoral array of competences.
Contributions to the issue range from representations of post-socialist identities in Croatian writer Jurica Pavičić’s short fictions, the economic and political crises in Greece (2009-2015), political and intellectual life and political Islam in present-day Turkey, to maritime trade in the Adriatic, intergenerational transmission of health determinants in Malta and the Mediterranean, and the work of the Fisherman of Halicarnassus in relation to some of Fernand Braudel’s pivotal tenets.
Contributions to the newly-published issue are by Prof. Eldi Grubišić Pulišelić (University of Split), Prof. Dionysios Tsirigotis (University of Piraeus), Prof. Cangül Örnek (Maltepe University), Dr. Sebastian Adlung (University of Leipzig), (University of Malta) & Prof. Sarah E. Curtis (Durham University), and Prof. Berna Fi̇ldi̇ş (Bartin University). The new issue also features a book review by historian Charles Dalli of Nicholas Coureas’s recently-published book ‘The Burgesses of Lusignan Cyprus, 1192‒1474’ (2020).
The Journal of Mediterranean Studies is an internationally-accredited scholarly publication indexed by major citation databases and journal-ranking indicators of repute, including SCOPUS and SCImago. For further information on submissions to the JMS, kindly contact the General Editor, , at this email.

 
								 
								