凤凰出版传媒集团 凤凰出版传媒股份有限公司

Jiangsu People's Publishing House Ltd.

Updated: 2024-11-18
(en.ppm.cn)

Founded in 1953, Jiangsu People's Publishing House (JSPPH) is one of the first "National Top 100 Publishers". It is dedicated to publishing books with cultural significance and social benefits.

JSPPH publishes about 2,000 new books each year, with a backlist of over 5,000 titles, covering philosophy, economics, political science, sociology, history, religion, education, and many other fields. Our academic series include "Phoenix Library", "Overseas China Study", and "The Same Planet". Some of the highlights of our new offerings include The Historical Data of Nanjing Massacre, A General History of Modern China, A History of Western Philosophy, The Modernization Process of the World, A General History of Buddhism in China, A General History of Chinese Aesthetics and Historical Documents Collected from Tianzhu. With a highly competent team of editing, publishing, and marketing professionals, JSPPH holds a strong position in the marketplace.

JSPPH maintains close relations with peer publishers around the world on rights trade and cooperation. Over the past three decades, we have published over 1,000 translated books. The "Overseas China Study" series is recognized as China's most authoritative foreign sinology study platform, a stage for international academic exchange and dialogue, and a legend in China's publishing industry. JSPPH also promotes our high-quality books to leading the publishers in US, Germany, the UK, the Netherlands, Russia, Turkey, and Vietnam.

Managing Director: Wang Baoding

Rights Manager: Du Jian

Add: 8-9F, Tower A, No 1 Hunan Road, Nanjing 210009, China

Tel: +86-25-83658050

Fax: +86-25-83658040

Email: jspphrights@163.com


  • Symbols of Jiangsu (Pocket Edition)

    Non-Fiction

    Symbols of Jiangsu (Pocket Edition) selects the most representative and symbolic Jiangsu special cultural resources.

  • Symbols of China

    Humanities & Social Science; Non-Fiction

    Symbols of China examines those things that make China Chinese.