Princeton University Press
Parent company | Princeton University |
---|---|
Founded | 1905 |
Founder | Whitney Darrow |
Country of origin | United States |
Headquarters location | Princeton, New Jersey |
Publication types | Books |
Official website | www |
The Princeton University Press is an independent publisher with close connections to Princeton University. Its mission is to disseminate scholarship within academia and society at large.
The press was founded by Whitney Darrow, with the financial support of Charles Scribner, as a printing press to serve the Princeton community in 1905.[1] Its first book was a new 1912 edition of John Witherspoon's Lectures on Moral Philosophy.[2]
Pulitzer Prizes
Six books from the Princeton University Press have won Pulitzer Prizes.
- Russia Leaves the War by George F. Kennan (1957)[3]
- Banks and Politics in America From the Revolution to the Civil War by Bray Hammond (1958)[4]
- Between War and Peace by Herbert Feis (1961)[5]
- Washington, Village and Capital by Constance McLaughlin Green (1963)[6]
- The Greenback Era by Irwin Unger (1965)[7]
- Machiavelli in Hell by Sebastian de Grazia (1989)[8]
Papers projects
Multi-volume historical documents projects undertaken by the Press include
- The Collected Papers of Albert Einstein
- The Writings of Henry David Thoreau
- The Papers of Woodrow Wilson (sixty nine volumes)
- The Papers of Thomas Jefferson
- Kierkegaard's Writings
Bollingen Series
The Princeton University Press Bollingen Series had its beginnings in the Bollingen Foundation, a 1943 project of Paul Mellon's Old Dominion Foundation. From 1945, the foundation had independent status, publishing and providing fellowships and grants in several areas of study including archaeology, poetry, and psychology. The Bollingen Series was given to the university in 1969.
Selected titles
- The Whites of Their Eyes: The Tea Party's Revolution and the Battle over American History, by Jill Lepore (2010)
- The Meaning of Relativity by Albert Einstein (1922)
- Atomic Energy for Military Purposes by Henry DeWolf Smyth (1945)
- How to Solve It by George Polya (1945)
- The Open Society and Its Enemies by Karl Popper (1945)
- The Hero With a Thousand Faces by Joseph Campbell (1949)
- The Wilhelm/Baynes translation of the I Ching, Bollingen Series XIX. First copyright 1950, 27th printing 1997.
- Anatomy of Criticism by Northrop Frye (1957)
- Philosophy and the Mirror of Nature by Richard Rorty (1979)
- QED: The Strange Theory of Light and Matter by Richard Feynman (1985)
- The Great Contraction 1929-1933 by Milton Friedman and Anna Jacobson Schwartz (1963) with a new Introduction by Peter Bernstein (2008)
References
- ^ "Princeton University Press, Erected Through the Generousity [sic] of Charles Scribners, a New and Unique Adjunct to the University" (PDF). The New York Times. May 19, 1912.
- ^ A History of Princeton University Press (2002)
- ^ The Pulitzer Prizes: 1957 Winners
- ^ The Pulitzer Prizes: 1958 Winners
- ^ The Pulitzer Prizes: 1961 Winners
- ^ The Pulitzer Prizes: 1963 Winners
- ^ The Pulitzer Prizes: 1965 Winners
- ^ The Pulitzer Prizes: 1990 Winners
Further reading
- "Book of Lists: Princeton University Press at 100". Artforum International, 2005.