When was New York University Press established?
Chancellor Elmer Ellsworth Brown established New York University Press in 1916. The press began operations that same year under his direct supervision.
Short answers, pulled from the story.
Chancellor Elmer Ellsworth Brown established New York University Press in 1916. The press began operations that same year under his direct supervision.
Arthur Huntington Nason served as the first director from 1916 until 1932. A gap in leadership followed between 1932 and 1946 when no official director held the role.
The press once gained its primary reputation by releasing The Collected Writings of Walt Whitman. This project defined early identity for the organization before shifting toward award-winning scholarly works.
Henry Jenkins published Convergence Culture in 2007 under the NYU Press banner while Samuel R. Delany also published major texts with this university house. Shuly Schwartz released The Rabbi's Wife in 2006 and Jonathon Hafetz has produced legal scholarship available through these pages.
New York University Press operates as an integral part of New York University itself rather than prioritizing profit margins above all else. It functions differently than commercial publishing houses that prioritize profit margins above all else to specialize in scholarly literature for academic audiences.