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Academic Studies Press

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Academic Studies Press
NameAcademic Studies Press
StatusActive
Founded2007
HeadquartersBoston, Massachusetts
PublicationsBooks, monographs, translations, series
TopicsSlavic studies, Jewish studies, Holocaust studies, Classical studies, Middle Eastern studies, Modern languages, Political history

Academic Studies Press is an independent scholarly publisher specializing in humanities and social sciences, with a focus on Slavic, East European, Jewish, Classical, and Middle Eastern studies. Founded in 2007, the press has built a reputation for publishing peer-reviewed monographs, translations, and edited volumes that intersect with scholarship on Vladimir Nabokov, Leo Tolstoy, Fyodor Dostoyevsky, Isaac Bashevis Singer, Hannah Arendt, and Albert Camus. Its catalog includes works engaging archival research from institutions such as the Harvard University, Yale University, Columbia University, Oxford University, and University of Chicago.

History

The press was established by a group of scholars and editors responding to gaps in publishing for specialized scholarship that aligns with projects from centers like the YIVO Institute for Jewish Research, Hoover Institution, Stanford University Press authors, and independent translators of texts related to Andrey Sakharov, Nikolai Bukharin, Mikhail Bulgakov, and Marcel Proust. Early lists combined studies tied to exhibitions at the Museum of Jewish Heritage and symposia at the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, reflecting networks that include scholars from Princeton University, Brown University, Rutgers University, and the London School of Economics. Over time the press expanded to include translations of archival materials from collections such as the Russian State Archive of Literature and Art and collaborations with editorial projects linked to the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum.

Organization and Management

The press operates from an editorial office in the Boston area with a governance structure involving an editorial board of scholars affiliated with universities like University of Pennsylvania, Indiana University Bloomington, McGill University, Hebrew University of Jerusalem, and University College London. Management coordinates production, rights, and sales while liaising with series editors drawn from institutions such as the University of Michigan, University of California, Berkeley, Cornell University, and the New School. Financial oversight has involved grant-funded projects with organizations like the National Endowment for the Humanities, private foundations associated with the Pulitzer Prize community, and partnerships that mirror arrangements used by presses including Brill Publishers and Routledge.

Publications and Imprints

Publications range from single-author monographs to multi-volume edited collections and literary translations of canonical and neglected authors such as Anna Akhmatova, Boris Pasternak, Czesław Miłosz, Szymon Szymonowicz, and Paul Celan. Imprint strategies mirror models used by Cambridge University Press and Oxford University Press for specialized series while maintaining independent cataloguing practices. The press has produced critical editions, bibliographies, and sourcebooks that parallel editorial efforts at the British Library and the Library of Congress, and has issued commemorative volumes tied to anniversaries of figures like Nadezhda Mandelstam and Solzhenitsyn.

Subject Areas and Series

Core subject areas include Slavic studies, Jewish studies, Holocaust studies, Byzantine and Classical studies, Middle Eastern studies, modern languages, and political history. Series titles gather work on topics connected to the scholarship of Sigmund Freud, Max Weber, Vladimir Lenin, Leon Trotsky, Josef Stalin, Alexander Solzhenitsyn, and Leopold von Ranke. Edited series often feature contributions from scholars associated with the Institute for Advanced Study, the European University Institute, and the Berkman Klein Center for Internet & Society.

Editorial and Peer Review Policies

Manuscripts are selected through editorial assessment and subjected to single- or double-blind peer review by experts affiliated with departments such as those at Georgetown University, University of Toronto, Syracuse University, and Johns Hopkins University. The press emphasizes rigorous bibliographic standards comparable to those upheld by journals like Slavic Review, Jewish Social Studies, and The Classical Quarterly. Editorial oversight includes copyediting, fact-checking, and permissions clearance with reference to archival sources from the National Archives (United States), the Russian State Archive, and university special collections.

Distribution and Partnerships

Distribution in North America, Europe, and beyond is managed through relationships with academic distributors and wholesalers similar to arrangements used by Rowman & Littlefield, Springer Nature, and Palgrave Macmillan. The press partners with university libraries, cultural institutions such as the Jewish Museum (New York), and scholarly associations including the Association for Slavic, East European, and Eurasian Studies and the Modern Language Association. International rights and translations have led to collaborations with publishers in Poland, Germany, Israel, and Russia, connecting titles to catalogues at the National Library of Poland and the Deutsche Nationalbibliothek.

Awards and Recognition

Books published by the press have been shortlisted for and won awards administered by organizations like the Modern Language Association, the Association for Jewish Studies, and regional prizes such as those conferred by the Polish Institute of Arts and Sciences of America. Individual translations and monographs have received recognition from institutions including the National Translation Awards and citations in venues such as the Times Literary Supplement, The New York Review of Books, and academic prize committees at Yale and Princeton.

Category:Academic publishing companies Category:Publishing companies established in 2007