Cornell University Press
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The Cornell University Press is the university press of Cornell University, an Ivy League university in Ithaca, New York. It is currently housed in Sage House, the former residence of Henry William Sage. It was first established in 1869, making it the first university publishing enterprise in the United States, but was inactive from 1884 to 1930. The press was established in the College of the Mechanic Arts, as mechanical engineering was called in the 19th century, because engineers knew more about running steam-powered printing presses than literature professors. Since its inception, The press has offered work-study financial aid: students with previous training in the printing trades were paid for typesetting and running the presses that printed textbooks, pamphlets, a weekly student journal, and official university publications. Today, the press is one of the country's largest university presses. It produces approximately 150 nonfiction titles each year in various disciplines, including anthropology, Asian studies, biological sciences, classics, history, industrial relations, literary criticism and theory, natural history, philosophy, politics and international relations, veterinary science, and women's studies. Although the press has been subsidized by the university for most of its history, it is now largely dependent on book sales to finance its operations. In 2010, the Mellon Foundation, whose President Don Michael Randel is a former Cornell Provost, awarded to the press a $50,000 grant to explore new business models for publishing scholarly works in low-demand humanities subject areas. With this grant, a book series was published titled "Signale: Modern German Letters, Cultures, and Thoughts". Only 500 hard copies of each book in the series will be printed, with extra copies manufactured on demand once the original supply is depleted. Other currently active series include "Expertise: Cultures and Technologies of Knowledge" and Police/Worlds: Studies in security, crime and governance. Domestic distribution for the press is currently provided by the University of North Carolina Press's Longleaf Services. Source: Wikipedia (en)
Editions 200
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Hospitality Branding
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The Fragile Balance of Terror
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Fluid Jurisdictions: Colonial Law and Arabs in Southeast Asia
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To bring the good news to all nations: evangelical influence on human rights and U.S. foreign relations
Fluid Jurisdictions: Colonial Law and Arabs in Southeast Asia
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Fluid Jurisdictions: Colonial Law and Arabs in Southeast Asia
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Black Lives and Spatial Matters
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Meaning and Interpretation : Wittgenstein, Henry James, and Literary Knowledge
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Novels, Readers, and Reviewers : Responses to Fiction in Antebellum America
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The Expense of Spirit : Love and Sexuality in English Renaissance Drama
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Feminizing the Fetish : Psychoanalysis and Narrative Obsession in Turn-of-the Century France
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Interpretive Conventions : The Reader in the Study of American Fiction
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Decadent Genealogies : The Rhetoric of Sickness from Baudelaire to D'Annunzio
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The Other Side of the Story : Structures and Strategies of Contemporary Feminist Narratives
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Fictions of Authority : Women Writers and Narrative Voice
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Reasons of State : Oil Politics and the Capacities of American Government
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Homicide in American Fiction, 1798–1860 : A Study in Social Values
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Lord I'm Coming Home : Everyday Aesthetics in Tidewater North Carolina
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Scenes of Sympathy : Identity and Representation in Victorian Fiction
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The Challenge of Bewilderment : Understanding and Representation in James, Conrad, and Ford
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Poetry in Speech : Orality and Homeric Discourse
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Writing in Limbo : Modernism and Caribbean Literature
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Bang Chan : Social History of a Rural Community in Thailand
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The Cosmic Web : Scientific Field Models and Literary Strategies in the Twentieth Century
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Power, Protection, and Free Trade : International Sources of U.S. Commercial Strategy, 1887–1939
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Phantom Formations : Aesthetic Ideology and the "Bildungsroman"
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Joyce : The Return of the Repressed
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The Supplement of Reading : Figures of Understanding in Romantic Theory and Practice
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Democracy's Children : Intellectuals and the Rise of Cultural Politics
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The Forms of Historical Fiction : Sir Walter Scott and His Successors
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The Taming of Evolution : The Persistence of Nonevolutionary Views in the Study of Humans
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Greatness Engendered : George Eliot and Virginia Woolf
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