Since its origins in 1890, University of Chicago Press’s mission involves dissemination of scholarship of highest standard and to publish works that promote education, foster public understanding, and enrich cultural life. The press its books and journals in advancing scholarly conversation across traditional disciplines and defining new areas of knowledge. University of Chicago Press also publishes non-scholarly work by writers, artists, and intellectuals, historical and contemporary translations of foreign-language texts, and books that contribute to the public’s understanding of Chicago and its region.

Subjects
Fictions of God English Renaissance Literature and the Invention of the Biblical Narrator Raphael Magarik
Home Work Gender, Child Labor, and Education for Girls in Urban America, 1870–1930 Ruby Oram
Arthur Schopenhauer The Life and Thought of Philosophy’s Greatest Pessimist David Bather Woods
Wittgenstein The Senses of Use Sandra Laugier, Daniela Ginsburg
Inventing Stereotype Race, Representation, and Interwar America Martin A. Berger
Doing Meritocracy Right How Business Leaders Can Turn an American Aspiration into Reality (and Why They Should) Thomas A. Cole
Earth Shapers How We Mapped and Mastered the World, from the Panama Canal to the Baltic Way Maxim Samson
As When Waking Daniel Schonning
The World in a Phrase A Brief History of the Aphorism, Second Edition James Geary
Self-Defense A Myth-Busting Guide to Immune Health Daniel M. Davis
Climate by Proxy A History of Scientific Reconstructions of the Past and Future Melissa Charenko
Big Culture Toward an Aesthetics of Magnitude David Wittenberg
Downloaded on 18.11.2025 from https://www.degruyterbrill.com/partner/chicago?lang=en
Scroll to top button