STEPSISTER PRESS

WELCOME TO THE STEPSISTER PRESS HOMEPAGE an imprint of Bridge Books

StepSister Press is an independent publishing company founded by Annie Heckman in 2007 to promote conversation on emerging art, literature, educational, and critical theory projects. The press has coordinated projects and collaborations with artists and writers around the world, including the annual Fwd: Museums series, in partnership with the Museum and Exhibition Studies (MUSE) Program at the University of Illinois at Chicago (UIC).

Bridge is a proud member of the following alliances:

New & Upcoming

STEPSISTER PRESS: “Invitation to Tea: A Tea Project Archive & Recipe Book” Edited by Aaron Hughes & Amber Ginsburg

STEPSISTER PRESS: “Invitation to Tea: A Tea Project Archive & Recipe Book” Edited by Aaron Hughes & Amber Ginsburg

Invitation To Tea: A Tea Project Archive & Recipe Book

Tea is something that we all share. —Mohamedou Ould Slahi, Guantánamo torture survivor

Invitation to Tea compiles 48 tea recipes, stories, and traditions, one for each of the countries that have had citizens extralegally held at the US military prison in Guantánamo. Highlighting the resistance of the people imprisoned there—780 since 2001—the recipes are paired with images of porcelain cast Styrofoam cups inscribed with flowers, inspired by stories of these men carving into Styrofoam cups as a form of expression, survival, and resistance. Again and again, these men made a mark, created beauty, and asserted their humanity, undermining the carceral logic of Guantánamo. The tea recipes in this book, which vary from sweet and milky to astringent and spicy, are a celebration of this resistance and traditions passed down from generation to generation—traditions of comfort, medicine, generosity, and solidarity.

CONTRIBUTORS:

Michael Rakowitz, Aliya Hana Hussain, Laura Pitter, and Erika Rappaport

Read More
FWD: MUSEUMS: “Redacted” (2023), Edited by Therese Quinn & Miguel Limon: “Redacted”
Michael Workman Michael Workman

FWD: MUSEUMS: “Redacted” (2023), Edited by Therese Quinn & Miguel Limon: “Redacted”

FWD: Museums Journal - Redacted (Upcoming)

A notable absence, a muting, making invisible. Redaction extends beyond the simple black squares as incomplete redactions – stamps marked with ‘deleted’ covering the text– white squares, and handmade notations.

Each black square signifies absence. It serves as a reminder for enforced forgetfulness. Uncovering the secret behind the mask and discovering the text underneath seems like a daring task, but is the redacted information really gone?

What is visible in cultural spaces, and what is invisible? In attempts to appeal to the public, what is redacted?

Read More
FWD: MUSEUMS: “Redacted” (2023), Edited by Therese Quinn & Miguel Limon: “Redacted” (Alternate Cover)
Museology / Museum Studies Michael Workman Museology / Museum Studies Michael Workman

FWD: MUSEUMS: “Redacted” (2023), Edited by Therese Quinn & Miguel Limon: “Redacted” (Alternate Cover)

FWD: Museums Journal - Redacted, Alternate Cover (Upcoming)

A notable absence, a muting, making invisible. Redaction extends beyond the simple black squares as incomplete redactions – stamps marked with ‘deleted’ covering the text– white squares, and handmade notations.

Each black square signifies absence. It serves as a reminder for enforced forgetfulness. Uncovering the secret behind the mask and discovering the text underneath seems like a daring task, but is the redacted information really gone?

What is visible in cultural spaces, and what is invisible? In attempts to appeal to the public, what is redacted?

Read More
STEPSISTER PRESS: “Making Way: Sailing Into The Revolutionary Storm” by Dick Farkas with drawings by M.A. Papanek-Miller and designed by Jessica Larva
Young Adults Michael Workman Young Adults Michael Workman

STEPSISTER PRESS: “Making Way: Sailing Into The Revolutionary Storm” by Dick Farkas with drawings by M.A. Papanek-Miller and designed by Jessica Larva

Dick Farkas, M.A. Papanek-Miller & Jessica Larva, “Making Way: Sailing Into the Revolutionary Storm”

Making Way: Sailing Into The Revolutionary Storm is an adventure story that takes place on the waterways of colonial America, on a schooner (sailing ship) named Commerce. The story embraces a group of unlikely teenagers who find each other, an experienced sailor and a dog who collectively embark on a life changing journey during the political upheaval that surrounded the start of a new country.

Read More
FWD: MUSEUMS: “Manifesto” (2022), Edited by Therese Quinn & Elisa Soto (Copy)
Museology / Museum Studies Michael Workman Museology / Museum Studies Michael Workman

FWD: MUSEUMS: “Manifesto” (2022), Edited by Therese Quinn & Elisa Soto (Copy)

Fwd: Museums Journal - Manifesto

HOW DO MUSEUMS RESPOND TO THE URGENCY OF THE MOMENT?

In what ways can museums be critically transformed to foster social justice work? Fwd: Museums, an inclusive, cross disciplinary publication, shares interventions, experiments, and community dialogues within and outside of museums. Our contributors reexamine, critique, and challenge museums as socially responsible spaces.

In our seventh issue, "Manifesto," encompassing more than just a declaration put into writing, these pages are the catalysts to spark action and inspire change. Our contributors, artists, professors, museum professionals, students, and others face our present difficulties and imagine bold new solutions and futures.

Read More
FWD: MUSEUMS: “In Transit” (2021), Edited by Therese Quinn & Ximena Mora y Oliván
Museology / Museum Studies Michael Workman Museology / Museum Studies Michael Workman

FWD: MUSEUMS: “In Transit” (2021), Edited by Therese Quinn & Ximena Mora y Oliván

Fwd: Museums Journal - In Transit

To be in transit is to be human. No one does well staying still too long. This past year has shown us more than ever that nothing is ever permanent.

In this journal we explore the different ways that people, museums, and institutions can be considered in transit. We are addressing questions of tradition, culture, movement, and remaking. We acknowledge that tradition is not necessarily a bad thing, but tradition is the product of an established stability and in this journal we are concerned with what must be changed because our world is constantly in flux.

We invite our readers to transport from one idea to another as they journey within these works. We ask our readers to consider the museum and how we as museum and cultural practitioners in the 21st century can grapple with the spectrum of changes that should take place now and in our future. How do cultures shift? How should our institutions shift alongside and represent change? In what way are we always moving?

Read More

Featured Backlist Titles