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Duke University Press

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Duke University Press
Parent companyDuke University
Founded1921
Country of originUnited States
Headquarters locationDurham, North Carolina
Distributionself-distributed (US)[1]
Combined Academic Publishers (UK)[2]
Publication typesBooks,Academic journals
Official websitewww.dukeupress.edu

Duke University Pressis anacademic publisheranduniversity pressaffiliated withDuke University.It was founded in 1921[3]by William T. Laprade as The Trinity College Press. (Duke University was initially called Trinity College). In 1926 Duke University Press was formally established. Ernest Seeman became the first director of DUP, followed by Henry Dwyer (1929–1944), W.T. LaPrade (1944–1951), Ashbel Brice (1951–1981), Richard Rowson (1981–1990), Larry Malley (1990–1993), Stanley Fish and Steve Cohn (1994–1998), Steve Cohn (1998–2019). Writer Dean Smith is the current director of the press.[4]

It publishes approximately 150 books annually and more than 55academic journals,as well as five electronic collections.[5]The company publishes primarily in thehumanitiesandsocial sciencesbut is also particularly well known for itsmathematicsjournals. The book publishing program includes lists in African studies, African American studies, American studies, anthropology, art and art history, Asian studies, Asian American studies, Chicano/Latino and Latin American studies, cultural studies, film and TV studies, indigenous and Native American studies, music, political and social theory, queer theory/LGBT studies, religion, science studies, and women's and gender studies.[6]

Notable authors published by Duke University Press includeAchille Mbembe,Donna Haraway,Lauren Berlant,Arturo Escobar,Walter Mignolo,Jack Halberstam,Sara Ahmed,Jane Bennett,Patricia Hill Collins,Jennifer Christine Nash,Christina Sharpe,Dionne Brand,Fredric Jameson,Gloria Anzaldua,Eve Kosofsky Sedgwick,Stuart Hall,C.L.R. James,andJames Baldwin.

History

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The press was founded in 1921 asTrinity College Presswith William T. Laprade as its first director. Following a restructuring and expansion, the name was changed to "Duke University Press" in 1926 with William K. Boyd taking over as director.[7]

ARTnews named Duke University Press to its 2021 Deciders list, saying "Many a university press publishes worthy books about art—but none engages the subject and all it can mean quite like Duke University Press."[8]In 2022, Amsterdam news stated, "Duke University Press is a leading academic publisher that has been pushing the envelope in Black non-fiction for the past decade. Their catalog becomes more robust each year by choosing Black thinkers who are ahead of the curve and experts in their fields."[9]

In February 2021, Duke University Press announced the formation of the Scholarly Publishing Collective, a partnership with nonprofit scholarly journal publishers and societies to provide journal services including subscription management, fulfillment, hosting, and institutional marketing and sales.[10]

Open access

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Duke is one of thirteen publishers to participate in theKnowledge Unlatchedpilot, a global library consortium approach to fundingopen access books.[11]Duke has provided books for the Pilot Collection.[12]The press has also published nearly 100 additional books through other open access programs, including Towards an Open Monograph Ecosystem.

See also

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References

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  1. ^"Duke University Press".Archived fromthe originalon July 5, 2017.RetrievedDecember 5,2017.
  2. ^"Marston Book Services".Archived fromthe originalon February 21, 2021.RetrievedDecember 4,2017.
  3. ^"Introduction to Duke University Press".
  4. ^"Leadership".DukeUPress.Duke University.RetrievedSeptember 28,2020.
  5. ^"Duke University Press".RetrievedOctober 10,2018.
  6. ^"Duke University Press".RetrievedMarch 3,2021.
  7. ^"Inventory of the Duke University Press Reference Collection, 1922–ongoing".Rare Book, Manuscript, and Special Collections Library [online catalog].Duke University Library.RetrievedApril 11,2010.
  8. ^"Who Will Shape the Art World in 2021?: ARTnews Presents 'The Deciders'".RetrievedJanuary 1,2021.
  9. ^"Five Black non-fiction books to look out for".RetrievedAugust 24,2022.
  10. ^"Duke University Press now offering journal publishing services to nonprofit scholarly publishers".Duke University Press.Archived fromthe originalon March 4, 2021.RetrievedMarch 8,2021.
  11. ^"Good for publishers".knowledgeunlatched.org.
  12. ^"Duke University Press at the 2014 IFLA World Library and Information Congress".Duke University Press Log.August 27, 2014.
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