Draft:Editori Laterza

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The Gius. Laterza & Figli, or Editori Laterza for short, is an Italian publishing house founded by Giovanni Laterza in Bari, Italy, in 1901.

History[edit]

The publishing house was founded in Bari on 10 May 1901, in partnership with the brothers by Giovanni Laterza (1873-1943), who had already opened a bookshop in the Apulian capital in 1896. The name "Gius. Laterza & sons", in the name of his father, Giuseppe Laterza (1841–1914), originates from the stationery shop that Vito Laterza (1867–1935) had started in 1885 in Putignano.[1]

Its history is linked to Benedetto Croce, the greatest exponent of idealist philosophical thought in Italy and one of the bulwarks of anti-fascism, who was a consultant for the publishing house for forty years, making use of the collaboration of young scholars and students including Luigi Russo, Guido De Ruggiero, and Giovanni Gentile, who within a few years would become leading figures in Italian culture. Croce published with Laterza almost all of his works and his journal (La Critica), and set the editorial line of the house right from the start; he wrote so in 1902to Giovanni Laterza: "I also think that you would do well to refrain at least for now from accepting books of novels, short stories and pleasant literature: and this in order to appear as a publisher with a specific physiognomy: that is, as a publisher of political, historical, artistic history books, of philosophy, [...] publisher of serious stuff". Among the prestigious collections by Laterzia inspired by Croce are the Biblioteca di cultura moderna, Classici della filosofia moderna, and the Scrittori d'Italia. The relationship between Croce and Laterza is now documented by an impressive correspondence in four volumes published by the same publishing house.

Commercial letter from the Bari company Giuseppe Laterza & Figli on headed paper reproducing the factory and shop, Bari 8 September 1920.

After World War II, the management of the publishing house passed into the hands of Vito Laterza (1926–2001), who progressively built a wider network of authors and interests around the publishing house. In 1951, coinciding with the fiftieth anniversary of the publishing house, a new series was launched, the Books of Time, which would be among the most influential in Italian culture in the second half of the twentieth century. In the 1960s, Laterza grew further, turning into a joint-stock company and opening an office in Rome, where Donato Barbone arrived from Bari, editorial director until 1968, who will leave the position to Enrico Mistretta, editorial director until 1992. Thus, a part of the activities moved to Rome, especially those of conception and more purely editorial ones, such as the relationship with consultants and the search for works to import from various Western countries. In 1964 the Universal Laterza series was born, which is proposed as a quality economic series, offering both classic texts and related non-fiction at an affordable price, in addition to the traditional fields of political history and philosophy, the new currents of literary criticism and historiography and the social sciences. In the following decade, the Universal Laterza was the publishing house's most successful series, with a circulation often exceeding ten thousand copies per title.

In the following years, the publishing offer expanded further, and authors gathered around the publishing house such as, among others, the linguist Tullio De Mauro, the historian of philosophy Tullio Gregory, the jurist Stefano Rodotà, the economist Paolo Sylos Labini. In 1984 the Laterza Universal Library was joined by the Laterza Universal Library, dedicated above all to works on history and classics of philosophy. In the same years, the presence in the school and university sector was also strengthened.

Giuseppe Laterza in Trento for the 2009 Economics Festival, which the Laterza publishing house helped to organise. With the death of Vito Laterza, in 2001, the management of the publishing house passed to Giuseppe Laterza, who manages university publishing and non-fiction from Rome, and to his cousin Alessandro Laterza, who mainly manages school publishing from Bari.

In recent years, the publishing house's interest — always mainly linked to the humanistic sphere — has also been oriented towards new media, with the publication, among other things, of a series of manuals on the Internet edited by Marco Calvo, Fabio Ciotti, Gino Roncaglia and Marco Zela, and with the diffusion through podcasts of conferences, meetings and lessons held on the initiative of the publishing house. Among these, starting from 2006–2007, the conferences of the "Lessons of History" cycle, held in Rome at the Parco della Musica, and then also in Milan, Florence, Turin, Genoa.

Furthermore, since 2006 the publishing house has been a member of the promoting committee of the Trento Festival of Economics,[2] and since 2008 of the Piacenza Festival of Law. In September 2014 he published the first book of Celacanto, a series dedicated to children aged 6 to 12.[3] In May 2015 he introduced Lea - Libri e Altro, a platform for reading a selection of books from his catalog in streaming.[4]

With the advent of the successful Contromano series, Laterza approaches narrative, a path that culminates in 2017 with the nomination for the Strega Prize of the novel The deep room by Vanni Santoni.[5]

Scholastic catalog[edit]

The publishing house has produced works for the school since its inception. In the fifties we note the Brief history of philosophy (1955–1957) by Guido De Ruggiero and Fabrizio Canfora, Italian literature for historically arranged essays by Croce (edited by Mario Sansone, 1956–1960), the Anthology of historical criticism (1957–1958) by Armando Saitta and the Introduction to the Constitution (1959) by Norberto Bobbio and Franco Pierandrei.

At the end of the 1960s, the "School Collection. New series" was published. Three titles require the presence of Laterza in secondary schools: Italian literature. With anthology of writers and critics (1969–1973) by Carlo Salinari and Carlo Ricci, which for the first time organically blends literary texts and historical-literary exposition; the Medieval, modern, contemporary history (1969–1970) by Rosario Villari, which, along the axis of political history, focuses attention on the social and economic scene; the history of philosophy (1973) by Francesco Adorno, Tullio Gregory, Valerio Verra, which proposes a systematic series of author's texts in support of the study of historical treatment.

Since the 1980s, Laterza has published works by Andrea Giardina, Giovanni Sabbatucci, Vittorio Vidotto, and is significantly present in other fields, from philosophy to ancient languages ​​and literature, from Italian literature to language education, from law to art history.

Notes[edit]

^ A communication system to support internal collaboration and customer relationship (PDF) [ link broken ], su bari10.smau.it . URL accessed June 10, 2014 . ^ The Laterza publishing house: the origins, su laterza.it . URL accessed February 20, 2020 . ^ Piero Fornara and Sara Bianchi, Festival of the economy: which globalization after the crisis? at ilsole24ore.com, April 23, 2009. Retrieved November 22, 2009 . ^ Ludovico Fontana, Kings, Vikings and warriors: history explained to children, in Officina Masterpiece/Corriere della Sera, 25 September 2014. ^ Ludovico Fontana, Books can now be read in streaming by subscribing, in Corriere Innovazione, 21 July 2015. ^ Daniele Giglioli, The dice and the warriors of Vanni Santoni. Almost forbidden games over there in the garage, in Corriere della Sera, 21 March 2017. URL consulted 26 March 2019 .

Bibliography[edit]

  • One hundred years of Laterza. 1885-1985. Testimonies of the authors, Rome-Bari, Laterza, 1985. ISBN 8842026018
  • Laterza editions. Historical catalog 1901-2000, Rome-Bari, Laterza, 2001. ISBN 8842064173
  • Benedetto Croce - Giovanni Laterza, Correspondence, 4 volumes, Rome-Bari, Laterza, 2004-2009.

Other projects[edit]

Contributor to Wikimedia Commons Wikimedia Commons has images or other files about Editori Laterza

External links[edit]

  • Official website: www.laterza.it
  • Latèrza (publishing house), on sapere.it, De Agostini .
  • Events organized by Editori Laterza, on RadioRadicale.it, Radio Radicale .
  • Laterza - A century of books We are history
  • "Economica Laterza" series, in WorldCat, 120. Retrieved August 16, 2019 (archived August 16, 2019) .

Gius. Laterza & Figli
FoundersGiuseppe Laterza, Alessandro Laterza

Storia[edit]

Negli anni successivi l'offerta editoriale si amplia ulteriormente, e attorno alla casa editrice si raccolgono autori come, fra gli altri, il linguista Tullio De Mauro, lo storico della filosofia Tullio Gregory, il giurista Stefano Rodotà, l'economista Paolo Sylos Labini. Nel 1984 all'Universale Laterza si affianca la Biblioteca Universale Laterza, dedicata soprattutto alle opere di storia e ai classici della filosofia. Negli stessi anni si andava rafforzando anche la presenza nel settore scolastico e universitario.

Con la morte di Vito Laterza, nel 2001, la gestione della casa editrice è passata a Giuseppe Laterza, che segue da Roma l'editoria universitaria e la saggistica, e a suo cugino Alessandro Laterza, che segue da Bari soprattutto l'editoria scolastica.

Negli ultimi anni l'interesse della casa editrice - sempre legato prevalentemente all'ambito umanistico - si è orientato anche verso i nuovi media, con la pubblicazione fra l'altro di una serie di manuali su Internet a cura di Marco Calvo, Fabio Ciotti, Gino Roncaglia e Marco Zela, e con la diffusione attraverso podcast di conferenze, incontri e lezioni tenute per iniziativa della casa editrice. Tra queste, a partire dal 2006-2007, le conferenze del ciclo "Lezioni di Storia", svoltesi a Roma al Parco della Musica, e poi anche a Milano, Firenze, Torino, Genova.

Dal 2006 inoltre la casa editrice fa parte del comitato promotore del Festival dell'economia di Trento e dal 2008 del Festival del diritto di Piacenza. Nel settembre 2014 pubblica il primo libro di Celacanto, collana dedicata ai bambini dai 6 ai 12 anni. Nel maggio 2015 introduce Lea - Libri e altro, piattaforma per leggere in streaming una selezione dei libri del suo catalogo.

Con l'avvento della fortunata collana Contromano, Laterza si avvicina alla narrativa, percorso che culmina nel 2017 con la candidatura al Premio Strega del romanzo La stanza profonda di Vanni Santoni.

Laterza family tree[edit]

Federico (1961)
Giuseppe
*18411914
Vito
*18671935
Giovanni
*18731943
Luigi
*18751927
Pasquale
*18701953
Francesco
*18791928
Giuseppe
*18991960
Franco
*19101981
Vito
*19262001
Paolo (?)
*19282017
Federico Laterza
*1961
Alessandro
*1958

Note[edit]

  1. ^ "La casa editrice Laterza: le origini". Retrieved 20 February 2020.
  2. ^ Piero Fornara e Sara Bianchi (23 April 2009). "Festival dell'economia : quale globalizzazione dopo la crisi?". Retrieved 22 November 2009.
  3. ^ Ludovico Fontana (25 September 2014). "Re, vichinghi e guerrieri: la storia spiegata ai piccoli". Officina Masterpiece/Corriere della Sera.
  4. ^ Ludovico Fontana (21 July 2015). "Ora i libri si leggono in streaming facendo l'abbonamento". Corriere Innovazione.
  5. ^ Daniele Giglioli (21 March 2017). "I dadi e i guerrieri di Vanni Santoni. Giochi quasi proibiti laggiù in garage". Corriere della Sera. Retrieved 26 March 2019.
  6. ^ "Un sistema di comunicazione per supportare la collaborazione interna e la relazione con i clienti" (PDF). Retrieved 10 June 2014.[dead link]

Bibliografia[edit]

  • Cento anni di Laterza. 1885-1985. Testimonianze degli autori, Roma-Bari, Laterza, 1985. ISBN 8842026018
  • Le edizioni Laterza. Catalogo storico 1901-2000, Roma-Bari, Laterza, 2001. ISBN 8842064173
  • Benedetto Croce - Giovanni Laterza, Carteggio, 4 voll., Roma-Bari, Laterza, 2004-2009.

Collegamenti esterni[edit]

Laterza Categoria:Aziende della città metropolitana di Bari Categoria:Cultura a Bari


This open draft remains in progress as of July 5, 2023.