A Brief History of Yale University Press
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Robert Pranzatelli
Adapted from A World of Letters by Nicholas A. Basbanes
I. THE FIRST HALF-CENTURY
II. GROWTH AND DIVERSIFICATION (MID- TO LATE 20th CENTURY)
III. A TWENTY-FIRST CENTURY PRESS
In 2001 Yale partnered with Harvard University Press and MIT Press to create TriLiteral LLC, a limited liability partnership to manage distribution of all three presses’ publications, and together built a 155,000-square-foot warehouse and distribution center in Rhode Island.
That same year, YUP entered the twenty-first century with an extraordinary, unexpected success, albeit one with a grim catalyst: the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001, prompted an immediate demand for what was, at the time, the only available primer on who and what the Taliban were. Taliban: Militant Islam, Oil, and Fundamentalism in Central Asia, by Pakistani journalist Ahmed Rashid, had recently been brought out in paperback by YUP, which had bought the U.S. rights in 1998 and published the book in hardcover in 2000. Expectations for sales had been modest, but in the wake of the attacks, the book sold hundreds of thousands of copies and quickly reached the top of the New York Times paperback bestseller list. It remained on that list for months, and its author made the rounds of national television interviews.
Also receiving a surprise burst of attention immediately post-9/11 was the backlist title Five Days in London, May 1940, by John Lukacs, which New York Mayor Rudy Giuliani cited as an “inspiration” in a number of national interviews. YUP’s longstanding strength in the History category was soon bolstered again, most happily, with the 2002 publication of Edmund S. Morgan’s Benjamin Franklin, a New York Times bestseller that allowed the eminent historian and Yale professor emeritus to epitomize, as effectively as any author ever has, what the phrase “scholarly but accessible” means to Yale University Press. The following year, another YUP bestseller, Gore Vidal’s Inventing a Nation: Washington, Adams, Jefferson (2003), launched the Icons of America series and treated readers to its author’s characteristically incisive take on American history.
After twenty-three years (and more than 4,000 books), John Ryden retired as director of the Press, to be succeeded by John Donatich, who arrived in January 2003 to take even further the Press’s growth, expansion, and diversification, while guiding it into an era of new technological possibilities.
The vitality and variety of the YUP list in the 2000s can be seen in the success of such titles as E. H. Gombrich’s A Little History of the World (2005), a remarkable classic that parents can share with their children, which has gone on to sell nearly one million copies in multiple editions and formats, and inspire an entire series of “Little Histories”; critically acclaimed and award-winning volumes that included Jonathan Edwards: A Life (2003), by George M. Marsden, and Dwelling Place: A Plantation Epic (2005), by Erskine Clarke; and current events books that made headlines and played a significant role in the public dialogue, such as Francis Fukuyama’s America at the Crossroads (2006) and Ali A. Allawi’s The Occupation of Iraq: Winning the War, Losing the Peace (2007), each of which became part of the ongoing debate over American foreign policy. In another important area of influence, the Press’s leading-edge books on climate change, such as Gus Speth’s Red Sky at Morning (2004), made major contributions to the global conversation on a vital issue. Richard H. Thaler and Cass R. Sunstein’s Nudge: Improving Decisions About Health, Wealth, and Happiness (2008) had a public policy impact on a broad array of issues; that book went on to become a bestseller and its authors went on to related notoriety, Richard Thaler winning a Nobel Prize in Economics and Cass Sunstein serving in President Obama’s administration where he set about applying the book’s principles for the greater public good.
These years also saw beautiful editions on Yale’s outstanding natural sciences list, such as In the Company of Crows and Ravens (2005), by John M. Marzluff and Tony Angell; a bestselling and critically acclaimed foray into the growing study of graphic novels and cartoon art as literature with An Anthology of Graphic Fiction, Cartoons, and True Stories (2006), edited by Ivan Brunetti; and important books on law, business, architecture, Jewish studies, psychology, every aspect of the arts and humanities—in short, a large, vibrant picture of publishing at its best.
Benjamin Schwarz, writing in the Atlantic Monthly, called Yale University Press “the most important and exciting university-press publisher of humanities titles today.” Felipe Fernandez-Armesto, in the Literary Review, stated, “Publication by Yale University Press has become a guarantee of literary merit as well as scholarly excellence.” And Robert Leiter of the Jewish Exponent declared: “I think Yale has consistently had the finest line-up of books—season after season—during the last two decades or more.”
Over the years, the Press had established an extraordinary array of partnerships with leading museums—including the Metropolitan Museum of New York, the National Gallery of Art, the Art Institute of Chicago, the Philadelphia Museum of Art, and the National Gallery in London, among many others—to publish and distribute major exhibition catalogues and other works. As a result it became—and has remained—the widely recognized leader in the field, its seasonal catalogue divided into two parts, one devoted exclusively to art and architecture books, the other to the rest of the list (general interest and scholarly titles in all other categories).
By the second decade of the new century, Yale University Press had become the largest books-only, U.S.-based university press. Having already published more than eight thousand books, it continued to publish upwards of 300 new books per year and broaden its offerings. Its major digital initiatives included a logical outgrowth of the earlier Annals of Communism series, the Stalin Digital Archive which provides unprecedented access to historically significant content—primary source materials from Stalin’s personal papers and insightful monographs on communism—with robust online capabilities that allow scholars and students to interact with the content and collaborate in new ways. Another innovative digital initiative, the A&A ePortal, provides a digital environment in which to discover and interact with important art and architectural history scholarship. With deep tagging on images and text, a robust image search that directs users toward relevant publications, and an interactive online reader tailored for highly illustrated works, the A&A ePortal is a powerful research tool.
In another groundbreaking digital initiative, Yale University Press introduced an award-winning and critically acclaimed mobile app for iPad, based on one of its most lastingly influential books, The Interaction of Color by Josef Albers. Built on Albers’s methodologies and packed with interactive features, it offers users a fresh, dynamic way to introduce themselves to Albers’s challenging and enlightening principles, experiments, and ideas. At the same time, the Press’s commitment to, and success with, lavish print catalogues continued to prove the appeal of the art book as irresistible object, nowhere more evident than in the phenomenal ongoing sales and visual impact of the Metropolitan Museum of Art’s Alexander McQueen: Savage Beauty (2011), a volume that has proven itself a landmark art monograph for the 21st century.
Other innovations in its publishing program have also continued to energize the Press. The Cecile and Theodore Margellos World Republic of Letters series, championing the translation and publication of important literary works from around the world, has come to include Nobel Prize, Best Translated Book Award, PEN Translation, and Saif Ghobash Banipal prize- winners, among other internationally recognized awards. Its roster of extraordinary authors includes Patrick Modiano, Can Xue, Claudio Magris, Adonis, Hoda Barakat, and Cees Nooteboom, among many others. Jewish Lives, a prizewinning series in partnership with the Leon D. Black Foundation, offers contemporary biographies that pair notable authors with notable subjects ranging from Ben-Gurion, Louis D. Brandeis, and Sarah Bernhardt to Einstein, Freud, Mark Rothko, and Barbra Streisand. The Yale Drama Series, funded by the David Charles Horn Foundation, celebrates new works by previously unheralded playwrights, through both publication and a staged reading. (The drama series was launched in 2007 with eloquent remarks by the three-time Pulitzer Prize-winning playwright Edward Albee, the competition’s inaugural judge.)
As these and other ambitious initiatives grew stronger, Yale University Press continued to publish important books that expanded and clarified the historical record, such as Pekka Hämäläinen’s critically acclaimed volumes The Comanche Empire (2008) and Lakota America (2019), Andrew Lipman’s The Saltwater Frontier: Indians and the Contest for the American Coast (2015), Lisa Brooks’ Our Beloved Kin: A New History of King Philip’s War (2018), and Stephanie E. Jones-Rogers’ They Were Her Property: White Women as Slave Owners in the American South (2019). Significant cultural criticism such as Melissa Harris-Perry’s Sister Citizen: Shame, Stereotypes, and Black Women in America (2011) and madison moore’s Fabulous: The Rise of the Beautiful Eccentric (2018) also played a substantial role on the Yale list.
In 2019, the Press celebrated the centenary of its best-known series—and the oldest annual literary award in the United States—with the publication of the anthology Firsts: 100 Years of Yale Younger Poets, edited by Carl Phillips. In 2020, it launched Yale Press Audio, its own audiobook program, to further expand the number of its books that are available in audio format.
One of the most vivid examples of Yale University Press bringing essential knowledge to the wider world can be seen in the evolution—from an online Yale course, to a book, to a global resource—of Frank Snowden’s Epidemics and Society: From the Black Death to the Present (2019), a book that in the face of the COVID-19 pandemic has provided desperately needed context for policymakers, journalists, and citizens everywhere. In 2020 and beyond, Yale University Press continues to strive to exemplify publishing at its best and most meaningful.