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Yale University Press

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Yale University Press
Type
Publisher
Area
New Haven
Date Founded
1908
Date Dissolved
?

Wikipedia

Yale University Press is the university press of Yale University. It was founded in 1908 by George Parmly Day and Clarence Day, grandsons of Benjamin Day, and became a department of Yale University in 1961, but it remains financially and operationally autonomous.

As of 2020, Yale University Press publishes approximately 300 new hardcover and 150 new paperback books annually and has a backlist of about 5,000 books in print. Its books have won five National Book Awards, two National Book Critics Circle Awards and eight Pulitzer Prizes.

The press maintains offices in New Haven, Connecticut and London, England. Yale is the only American university press with a full-scale publishing operation in Europe. It was a co-founder of the distributor TriLiteral LLC with MIT Press and Harvard University Press. TriLiteral was sold to LSC Communications in 2018.

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Editions

NameAuthor CreditsFormatISBNRelease Date
Habermas and the Dialectic of ReasonDavid IngramHardcover978-0-300-03680-01987
The Art of Not Being Governed: An Anarchist History of Upland Southeast AsiaJames C. ScottHardcover978-0-300-15228-92009-09-30
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Identifiers

VIAF
121971897
Wikidata ID
Q255147

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Last Modified
2023-07-12