Johnson was awarded a Festschrift in 2018: it was titled "Essays for the Library of Seshat: Studies Presented to Janet H. Johnson on the Occasion of Her 70th Birthday" and was edited by
Robert K. Ritner.[4]
Selected works
Johnson, Janet H. (1986). Thus wrote ꜥOnchsheshonqy: an introductory grammar of Demotic (1st ed.). Chicago, Il: Oriental Institute of the University of Chicago.
ISBN978-0918986498.
Whitcomb, Donald S.; Johnson, Janet H. (1982). Quseir al-Qadim 1980: preliminary report. Malibu: Undena Publications.
ISBN978-0890031124.
Johnson, Janet H. (1991). Thus wrote ꜥOnchsheshonqy: an introductory grammar of Demotic (2nd ed.). Chicago, Il: Oriental Institute of the University of Chicago.
ISBN978-0918986764.
Johnson, Janet H., ed. (1992). Life in a multi-cultural society: Egypt from Cambyses to Constantine and beyond. Chicago, Il: Oriental Institute of the University of Chicago.
ISBN978-0918986849.
Johnson, Janet H. (2004). The Demotic Verbal System (2nd ed.). Chicago: Oriental Institute of the University of Chicago.
ISBN978-0918986023.
Teeter, Emily; Johnson, Janet H., eds. (2009). The life of Meresamun: a temple singer in ancient Egypt. Chicago, Il: Oriental Institute of the University of Chicago.
ISBN978-1885923608.
References
^
ab"Janet H. Johnson". Department of Near Eastern Languages and Civilizations. University of Chicago. Retrieved 12 April 2018.
^
abcJohnson, Janet H . (2015).
"CURRICULUM VITAE". chicago.academia.edu. Retrieved 12 April 2018.
^Ritner, Robert K., ed. (2018). Essays for the Library of Seshat: Studies Presented to Janet H. Johnson on the Occasion of Her 70th Birthday. Chicago: Oriental Institute Press.
ISBN978-1614910329.