Project MUSE is a leading provider of digital humanities and social sciences content, providing access to journal and book content from nearly 300 publishers. With warehouses on three continents, worldwide sales representation, and a robust digital publishing program, the Books Division connects Hopkins authors to scholars, experts, and educational and research institutions around the world. With critically acclaimed titles in history, science, higher education, consumer health, humanities, classics, and public health, the Books Division publishes 150 new books each year and maintains a backlist in excess of 3,000 titles.
The division also manages membership services for more than 50 scholarly and professional associations and societies. The Journals Division publishes 85 journals in the arts and humanities, technology and medicine, higher education, history, political science, and library science. The Press is home to the largest journal publication program of any U.S.-based university press. One of the largest publishers in the United States, the Johns Hopkins University Press combines traditional books and journals publishing units with cutting-edge service divisions that sustain diversity and independence among nonprofit, scholarly publishers, societies, and associations. B31 connecting its movement through modern technology, using the mainstream media to gain credibility by emphasizing common values, and co-opting the rhetoric of feminism, the movement works both within and challenges cultural norms. However, the article insists that the movement does not represent simply a reactionary impulse-it does not merely desire a return to some simple, mythic past rather, Quiverfull readily engages with modern culture in order to argue for its worldview. The article argues that the Quiverfull movement is a community of members who are connected through their belief in gender essentialism, divine control of reproduction, and culture war. Examined are popular media representations of the movement, as well as Quiverfull members' own self representations, including books, news articles, online articles, blogs, and television shows, to assess QuiverfulVs larger cultural significance and analyze the movement in the context of pro-natalism and the backlash against feminism. Women, in particular, are encouraged to sacrifice their bodies for unfettered reproduction and to submit to both God and their husbands, who are their earthly masters. Quiverfull members are evangelical Christians who eschew all forms of birth control as interference with God's divine plan. The movement derives its name from Psalm 127, which considers children to be a "heritage from the Lord" and compares them to arrows in a quiver with which believers may face their enemies. The article focuses on the Quiverfull movement, which began in the 1980s in the United States.