Literature

Alberto Manguel: “Borges and the Impossibility of Writing”

Alberto Manguel delivers the Finzi-Contini Lecture at Yale University, entitled “Borges and the Impossibility of Writing”. He is introduced by Maria Menocal, director of the Whitney Humanities Center. An acclaimed anthologist, translator, essayist, novelist, and editor, Manguel once served as a reader for Jorge Luis Borges and has been hailed

Continue reading…

Follow Friday Links – April 9, 2010

Back this week with more interesting YUP-related links from the Twitterverse: @LDWeinberg‘s link to a cheat sheet for Matisse: Radical Invention was passed around by several art enthusiasts. @TorontoSymphony placed Sibelius in an unlikely locale as part of an online contest. @arbitrix and @vitamingc checked in from Ken Chen’s book

Continue reading…

Superman’s debut becomes world’s first million dollar comic book

He may be known as the Man of Steel, but after yesterday’s record-setting sale of Action Comics #1 for $1 million, Superman has officially gone platinum. The transaction smashed the previous comic book sale record, which was set in 2009 when another, less pristine copy of Action Comics #1sold for

Continue reading…

Will English remain the world’s dominant language?

The Schott's Vocab blog on the New York Times website has posted a fascinating interview with Claude Hagège, author of On the Death and Life of Languages, which YUP recently published in a new English translation. When asked about languages challenging English's global dominance, Hagège makes two particularly fascinating points

Continue reading…

An Anchor Yale Bible for the 21st century

Since Yale University Press acquired the esteemed Anchor Bible series in 2007, our friends at Logos Bible Software have been hard at work keeping the series up-to-date for the 21st-century reader. Having already integrated the 84-volume Anchor Yale Bible and its accompanying 6-volume Dictionary into their leading biblical software, the

Continue reading…

Being and Time and Scandal

In the wake of a heated commentary by Carlin Romano in The Chronicle Review, the academy has revived a familiar and unsettling debate over the merits of philosopher Martin Heidegger's work in light of the thinker's well-known connections to Nazism. The publication of Emmanuel Faye's book, Heidegger: The Introduction of

Continue reading…

What would Victor Hugo do?

The following guest post was written by Marva Barnett, author of Victor Hugo on Things That Matter: What is just and what is legal are all too often not the same thing. Nina Totenberg’s recounting of the current Supreme Court case about prosecutorial immunity illuminates what Victor Hugo called “the

Continue reading…

The American Play and The Tainted Muse in review

“Some people make history; others make history interesting.” So begins a two-page spread in the October issue of Dramatics Magazine featuring two recent highlights from Yale’s drama list, Marc Robinson‘s The American Play and Robert Brustein‘s The Tainted Muse. Produced by the Educational Theatre Association and oriented toward practitioners in

Continue reading…

Comic-Con from coast to coast

Fans of comics and popular culture from across the world are gathering in San Diego for the 40th Comic-Con International, the largest convention of its kind. For fans unable to make the yearly pilgrimage to San Diego for four days of comic madness, we’ll gladly suggest a few titles that

Continue reading…

Celebrate National Poetry Month with the YUP

April is National Poetry Month, and the Yale University Press is prepared to celebrate with an outstanding selection of new titles related to the fine art of verse. In her foreword to Arda Collins’ It is Daylight, the 2008 winner of the annual Yale Series of Younger Poets competition, contest

Continue reading…