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Sometimes the following happens: a result is proven, but the author never submits a paper for publication. In some cases, a preprint appears. In some cases, the proof is so short that it can be presented at a conference or lecture series, and the community is convinced. Maybe it later becomes incorporated in the work of others, book or lecture notes expositions appear, other work generalizes or improves upon it etc. The result is widely accepted, and the community gives due credit.

Now assume that some years later, the author decides to submit the paper to a prestigious journal. How should the editor treat it, depending on the circumstances listed above, importance of the result, etc.? The two obvious extreme points of view are "reject, since the result is not new" and "treat the paper as proving a new result with a somewhat delayed submission", but there's a whole spectrum in between, e.g., "what was good for Annals 20 years ago is not anymore, but OK for a lesser journal".

I would be especially interested in precedents that are publicly known or can be shared publicly.

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    $\begingroup$ I'm not posting in Academia since I've never heard this to occur in other fields. $\endgroup$
    – Kostya_I
    Commented Jun 4, 2022 at 8:34
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    $\begingroup$ An example: zbmath.org/?q=an%3A1067.55006 $\endgroup$ Commented Jun 4, 2022 at 8:52
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    $\begingroup$ An example: McLean, Robert C. Deformations of calibrated submanifolds. Comm. Anal. Geom. 6 (1998), no. 4, 705–747. Hitchin's MR review: McLean's paper has been highly influential already. $\endgroup$
    – Ben McKay
    Commented Jun 4, 2022 at 8:56
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    $\begingroup$ Alex Postnikov's "Total positivity, Grassmannians, and networks" has been around for 20 years now and probably has been cited hundreds of times. I still hope he'll submit it. $\endgroup$ Commented Jun 4, 2022 at 14:28
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    $\begingroup$ For the OP: I fear that this question is in danger of just attracting answers where people like to post their favourite examples of "unpublished classics" while not addressing the question you have put in bold "how should an editor deal with this". Is there anything you can do about this, or are you happy with the current trend of answers? $\endgroup$
    – Yemon Choi
    Commented Jun 9, 2022 at 3:52

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Such things frequently happened to papers of William Thurston. His opus magnum "Geometry and topology of 3-manifolds" existed as a preprint for several decades, until a part of it was published as a book, but the whole is still unpublished.

His preprint on Combinatorics and dynamics of rational maps was never published in a definite form, even as a preprint. There are papers of other authors which give an exposition of his results. This text revolutionized the subject. In the preface to "On the geometry and dynamics of homeomorphisms of surfaces, Bull. AMS 19 (1988), he wrote:

This article was widely circulated as a preprint, about 12 years ago. At that time the Bulletin did not accept research announcements, and after a couple of attempts to publish it, I gave up, and the preprint did not find a home.

Same applies to many other papers of Thurston. Some of them were published with decades of delay, others never published. He partially explained this situation is his article On proof and progress in mathematics, BAMS 30 (1994). Roughly speaking, he thought that formal publication in a journal was not the best way to spread important ideas.

Edit. Another example is G. Perelman's proof of the Thurston Geometrization conjecture, which the author never submitted to a journal despite a million dollars prize promised. But Perelman at least published his complete text in the arXiv, which Thurston did not care to do.

Edit 2. Another example is the "Esquisse d'un programme" by Grothendieck. This was not even a preprint, but a kind of job application. It made a very substantial influence, and was developed by many people.

Edit 3. Stockholm lectures of Paul Painleve (1895) despite their enormous influence during the last 125 years, exist only as a (hand-written!) preprint.

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    $\begingroup$ By the way, despite the Latin origins, in English one switches it and says "magnum opus". This is a great example, but (like the other answer) it just describes the papers, rather than saying anything about how the authors specially treated it, which is the question, right? $\endgroup$
    – LSpice
    Commented Jun 4, 2022 at 13:14
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    $\begingroup$ Pardon my error; I said "how the authors specially treated it", but I meant "editors" (as in the question), not "authors". $\endgroup$
    – LSpice
    Commented Jun 4, 2022 at 14:31
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    $\begingroup$ I know that some of Thurston's papers were rejected. Unfortunately, I am not sure that I can reveal the details of this, since this information comes from a private source. $\endgroup$ Commented Jun 4, 2022 at 14:47
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    $\begingroup$ @LSpice “opus magnum” is also accepted — though rarer — in English, just as in Latin (see e.g. Chambers 1908). $\endgroup$ Commented Jun 6, 2022 at 7:05
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    $\begingroup$ I second @LSpice's opening comment (with 'authors' replaced by 'editors' as Loren mentions later) $\endgroup$
    – Yemon Choi
    Commented Jun 9, 2022 at 4:12
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This happened in my career. In 1984 I published two preprints, joint with M. Lyubich, in Russian and two short announcements based on these preprints (also in Russian). These had a substantial following. In the early 1990s we wrote a paper and submitted it to a journal. The paper was rejected on the grounds that "this is a survey of the well-known results". (Which was essentially true: by that time the results were already well-known since many people read and used our preprints). So we submitted the paper to another journal, and in 1992 the paper was published. It is my most cited paper.

The situation is quite common in the subject of holomorphic dynamics. In 1982 Douady and Hubbard published a large preprint (>200 pages) "Etude dynamique des polynomes complexes" and announced the main results in a CR note. They wanted to write a book, but this plan never materialized. This preprint established the foundation of the study of Mandelbrot set.

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There are countless examples, especially if one includes the publication of the Nachlass of a deceased mathematician. Let me mention just one example that I have been looking forward to. The book Integration in Finite Terms: Fundamental Sources (probably not the best hyperlink, but I don't think it has a DOI yet) is slated to be published soon. When I requested more information from one of the editors, Michael Singer, he provided me with a sneak peek at an early draft of the Preface. After explaining that the book contains four items, the first two of which are reprints (of a paper by Rosenlicht and a book by Ritt, both entitled Integration in Finite Terms), the Preface goes on to say:

The third is a revised version of Robert Risch’s unpublished On the integration of elementary functions which are built up using algebraic operations. This latter paper reduced the problem of finding elementary antiderivatives of elementary functions to a problem in arithmetic algebraic geometry: the problem of determining if a point on the jacobian of a curve is of finite order. Risch presented a solution of this latter problem in [Ris70] in the context of deciding the elementary integrability of an algebraic function in [Ris70]. The present paper includes the complete proof. The commentary of Clemens G. Raab discusses the impact of this paper and further developments. The final paper is the unpublished thesis of Barry M. Trager Integration of Algebraic Functions. This latter paper provided practical algorithms for performing the integration in finite terms of algebraic functions after the theoretical results of Risch. It is followed by the commentary of Barry Trager, who gives further insight into the methods of this thesis as well as subsequent developments.

The OP also asks what an editor should do in such situations. Although MO usually frowns upon opinion-based questions, I will offer an opinion anyway. The mathematical community should do more than it currently does to encourage the publication of, or at least the wide distribution of, such material. As a community, we often encourage people to read the masters, and we also take some pride in the "democratic" nature of our subject, meaning that mathematics is open to all. Well, it's not open to all if some of the writings of the masters are available only to a privileged inner circle. Publication of important and highly influential unpublished material does not solve all such problems but it is a step in the right direction. Currently I think we place too much emphasis on novelty. I like what Harold Edwards said in his book Riemann's Zeta Function about Siegel's monumental effort to study Riemann's Nachlass and present his findings to the mathematical public.

One wonders whether anyone else would ever have unearthed this treasure if Siegel had not. It is indeed fortunate that Siegel's concept of scholarship derived from the older tradition of respect for the past rather than the contemporary style of novelty.

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    $\begingroup$ As I've commented on other answers: I thought that the OP's actual question was about how editors have handled and should handle certain papers, not inviting everyone to chip in with their favourite examples of unpublished classics. $\endgroup$
    – Yemon Choi
    Commented Jun 9, 2022 at 4:03
  • $\begingroup$ @YemonChoi Joe Silverman's comment addressed this point. The question as literally asked is too opinion-based for MO, except insofar as giving examples sheds some light on it. In spite of that, I did give an opinion, saying that editors should publish more of this sort of thing, taking into account a "democratic" view of mathematics and emphasizing the enduring value of past seminal research more than novelty. What more are you hoping for? $\endgroup$ Commented Jun 9, 2022 at 12:57
  • $\begingroup$ Also, I didn't give an example of an unpublished classic, unless you're quibbling that the book I mentioned isn't going to be on the shelves until next month. $\endgroup$ Commented Jun 9, 2022 at 12:58
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Here are two examples of work by John Tate. The first is his PhD thesis:

  • Tate, J. Fourier Analysis in Number Fields and Hecke's Zeta-Functions. Thesis (Ph.D.)–Princeton University. 1950

It was hugely influential, but was not published until Tate allowed it to be published in a conference proceedings 15 years later:

  • Tate, J. Fourier analysis in number fields, and Hecke's zeta-functions. Algebraic Number Theory (Proc. Instructional Conf., Brighton, 1965), 305–347, Thompson, Washington, D.C., 1967.

The second is Tate's construction of a $p$-adic uniformization for elliptic curves with non-integral $j$-invariant, which appeared in a letter that was widely circulated. I don't have my copy handy, but it certainly predates exposition of the material by, for example, Alain Robert in 1973 (Elliptic curves. Lecture Notes in Mathematics, Vol. 326. Springer-Verlag, Berlin-New York, 1973). This, too, had a tremendous influence, and a number of people published expositions of the material (with credit to Tate), but the original version was published under Tate's name only in 1995:

  • A review of non-Archimedean elliptic functions. Elliptic curves, modular forms, & Fermat's last theorem (Hong Kong, 1993), 162–184, Ser. Number Theory, I, Int. Press, Cambridge, MA, 1995.
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    $\begingroup$ There's also Tate's 1971 paper "Rigid analytic spaces" in Inventiones. On the first page there is a footnote: "This paper reproduces some personal notes of J. Tate (Harvard, 1962). Till now, these notes were only distributed privately, via IHES. The editors of Inventiones mathematicae believe that it is in the general interests of the mathematical community to make these notes available to everyone (Editorial Board)." $\endgroup$ Commented Jun 4, 2022 at 10:40
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    $\begingroup$ This is a great example, but (like the other answer) it just describes the papers, rather than saying anything about how the authors specially treated it, which is the question, right? $\endgroup$
    – LSpice
    Commented Jun 4, 2022 at 13:15
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    $\begingroup$ @LSpice The question asks how "should the editor treat the paper," which is subjective, with a subsidiary question of "what are some examples of how editors treated such papers." So I think giving examples in which the paper was published answers the second question, since means that the editor treated the paper as a submission that was worthy of publication, despite the fact (in the two cases that I cited) the material having subsequently been described by other authors (with credit given to Tate). And in the case of Tate's thesis, in some sense, it contained no new mathematics ... $\endgroup$ Commented Jun 4, 2022 at 13:45
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    $\begingroup$ Yes, I apologise for my erroneously substituting "author" for "editor". While I agree about the subjectivity, that is the question …. $\endgroup$
    – LSpice
    Commented Jun 4, 2022 at 14:30
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    $\begingroup$ @TimothyChow, I hoped for some insight as to how it should be addressed on a case by case basis, and indeed how it depends on the circumstances. As long as it's not codified, a collection of precedents is, of course, one way to get such an insight. $\endgroup$
    – Kostya_I
    Commented Jun 5, 2022 at 20:18
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G.A.Margulis announced his super -rigidity and arithmeticity in an ICM talk (which he could not attend). At the next ICM where he received the Fields medal, this was one of the major cited works. He later gave a different proof in an appendix to a Russian translation of M.S Raghunathan's book on discrete subgroups of Lie groups. Later an English translation of this appendix was published in the Inventiones.

Here is a link to the review https://mathscinet.ams.org/mathscinet-getitem?mr=739627

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  • $\begingroup$ So when/where was the mathematics published? $\endgroup$ Commented Jun 8, 2022 at 8:36
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    $\begingroup$ the math was published in an appendix to the Russian translation of the book mentioned above. See the review. An earlier proof was given in Margulis' ICM talk (which was given by someone else). $\endgroup$ Commented Jun 8, 2022 at 14:53
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    $\begingroup$ Does this case shed any light on the OP's underlying question "how should the editor treat it"? $\endgroup$
    – Yemon Choi
    Commented Jun 9, 2022 at 3:54
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    $\begingroup$ I believe it was the decision by the editors of Inventiones to publish the English translation (and probably the author consented to this). My point is that when the paper is very important but there are no convenient references, it seems a good idea to get the paper published. $\endgroup$ Commented Jun 9, 2022 at 7:07
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Two other recent examples are Vaughan Jones's 1999 arXiv preprint "Planar algebras. I", [Zbl 07402062] (https://zbmath.org/07402062) or Ragnar-Olaf Buchweitz's 1986 habilitation "Maximal Cohen-Macaulay modules and Tate cohomology" Zbl 07498869, both published posthumously only in 2021 after making a huge impact on the respective fields. In both cases, it seems obvious that the editorial intention was to make a published version available without curtailing their significance.

Side note: As we all know, there are way more examples of unpublished classics around. Actually, a few years ago (when we did some analysis in Bannister, Adam; Teschke, Olaf, An update on time lag in mathematical references, preprint relevance, and subject specifics, Eur. Math. Soc. Newsl. 106, 37-39 (2017). Zbl 1384.01099 of citation delay and publication status in zbMATH), I half-jokingly suggested to a Springer editor to found a journal which accepts only unpublished math classics on the suggestion of an expert board (both examples above would have been among the top 100 most likely candidates) which would become immediately a top impact factor math journal. (Imho, it deserves a honourable mention that the answer included "Fortunately, for math journals, we are not yet slaves of impact factors".)

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    $\begingroup$ Could call it the Journal of Known Results or JOKR for short... $\endgroup$ Commented Jun 5, 2022 at 23:14
  • $\begingroup$ Vaughan Jones hesitated to publish his arXiv preprint since he intended to rewrite it in order to publish it as a monograph, which sadly never happened. $\endgroup$ Commented Jun 7, 2022 at 18:50
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There are many examples in homotopy theory, and I list a few below (maybe others can add more). I think this is because the field has historically been very friendly (safe to share unpublished results without fear of being scooped) and small enough that conferences were a good way to get ideas out so folks could start using them right away. The arguments are also generally very technical and difficult to write, which delays things further.

Examples:

  1. Jacob Lurie has written thousands of pages about infinity categories and higher algebraic geometry, and it has largely been taken up by the community. But only his first book (Higher Topos Theory) has been published as far as I'm aware. His second book Higher Algebra has been cited 1053 times according to Google scholar and has not yet been published. And he has more books, continuing to revolutionize the field.

  2. Bousfield localization. This has become an indispensable tool in the field. It allows you to formally add more weak equivalences to your theory (e.g., enlarging from weak homotopy equivalences to rational equivalences). In 1973, Frank Adams presented how to do it at a conference in Chicago (you can still find his lecture notes if you search hard enough on Google). Pete Bousfield was in the audience and famously gave Adams a really hard time about the set-theory. It turns out Pete was right and work was needed! Doug Ravenel was aware of Adams' ideas, and used the localization ideas to carry out new computations. He wrote the paper (now a classic) "Localization with Respect to Certain Periodic Homology Theories" and folks in the field started using it. That paper was finally published in 1984 and includes the line "This paper supersedes a preprint of the same title which I had planned to publish along with [41] in the proceedings of the 1977 Evanston conference." Meanwhile, Bousfield published papers in 1975, 1977, 1978, and 1979 working out the localization theory. Then he published another, in 1996! For the latter, the ideas were out there being used by others (as he points out in the introduction).

  3. Jeff Smith is an amazing homotopy theorist who regularly does great mathematics and then never publishes it. Instead, he presents it at conferences and others eventually work it out. For example, he invented combinatorial model categories. Tibor Beke and Clark Barwick wrote down what Smith had in mind, in Sheafifiable homotopy model categories and On left and right model categories and left and right Bousfield localizations. He invented symmetric spectra, solving a hard problem that had been open for 20 years (this was written up by Hovey, Shipley, and Smith later). He also came up with the idea to use Delta-generated spaces in homotopy theory, and several authors have worked out aspects of that story. And he came up with a concept of ideals of ring spectra that Hovey put into paper form (and I did a follow-up but that's beside the point). Most of Smith's ideas are instant classics ("widely accepted and the community gives due credit" as the OP says) but this way of doing things does make publishing difficult.

  4. Goodwillie calculus, aka Functor Calculus. It's now a whole branch of homotopy theory. As pointed out in the comments to the OP's question, it was introduced in the early 1980s but Goodwillie's three papers took twenty years to be finished. In the meanwhile, dozens of other papers were written and published using the ideas. The first was published in 1990, the second in 1991, and the third in 2003. However, there are papers as early as 1985 using the theory (e.g., "Contributions to the study of continuous functors" by Char)

I'll add more examples if I think of them. I am sure Mike Hopkins has done things that were immediately taken up and used by the community and then took years to be published.

Your second question was how should the editor treat it when the paper is finally submitted for publication. I would argue that your second extreme "treat the paper as proving a new result with a somewhat delayed submission" is the right answer. As well, the fact that the ideas have been widely accepted and used should count in favor of the submission. People have all sorts of reasons for delaying writing things up. Maybe the author had some trauma in their personal life (death of a spouse, etc), for example. Do we really want to be part of a publishing machine that says "if you don't write it up fast enough, you don't get credit"? I think it's better to have a warmer, more human approach, that understands that sometimes delays happen. We as a community can be intentional about making it a friendlier process, even as academic jobs become more demanding and stressful.

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    $\begingroup$ Could I suggest trying to refocus this enthusiastic answer on the aspect of community/editorial policy that the OP asked, rather than "a list that you will add to if you think of (even) more examples"? $\endgroup$
    – Yemon Choi
    Commented Jun 9, 2022 at 3:55
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    $\begingroup$ BTW, after your list of cool examples, you say "your second question was". If I have read the OP correctly, that is the only question, not "the second question". $\endgroup$
    – Yemon Choi
    Commented Jun 9, 2022 at 3:59
  • $\begingroup$ Now that I look back at the OP, I see that you're right. I must have assumed he'd asked for examples since almost every other answer is providing examples. I'll leave both the list of examples and the actual answer I provided here. $\endgroup$ Commented Jun 9, 2022 at 5:23
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    $\begingroup$ @YemonChoi The OP asked for precedents. If a long-unpublished classic is published, then we may not know everything about the editorial process, but we do know this: the editor decided in favor of publication. Even Kostya_I has conceded that such examples do provide some relevant information. $\endgroup$ Commented Jun 10, 2022 at 12:36
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    $\begingroup$ One person's "friendly and small" research community that doesn't feel the need to publish its methods, sharing them only verbally is another's "cliquish and closed" that won't share ideas. However I totally agree with your last paragraph addressing the question. $\endgroup$
    – David Roberts
    Commented Jun 11, 2022 at 1:21
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When I was a student at Berkeley, George Bergman handed me his preprint "On diagram-chasing in double complexes" from 1973, that introduced me to the "Salamander lemma". The ideas are beautiful. Eventually Anton Geraschenko blogged about the preprint here. I think this gave enough impetus for George to update the paper and get it published in 2012 in Theory and Applications of Categories.

He has an even more famous preprint "On Jacobson radicals of graded rings" that is extensively cited. It hasn't yet been formally published. However, you can find a list of George's unpublished notes here.

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    $\begingroup$ Does this case shed any light on the OP's underlying question "how should the editor treat it"? $\endgroup$
    – Yemon Choi
    Commented Jun 9, 2022 at 3:54
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    $\begingroup$ An editor should ask the questions "Is this paper a valuable contribution? Is this journal a good fit? Will many people read it? etc..." The fact that this paper has a blog about it, was already well-received by many people, etc..., should all be taken into account. $\endgroup$ Commented Jun 9, 2022 at 4:29
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Reprints in Theory and Applications of Categories is a journal for

articles or other works from the body of important literature in Category Theory and closely related subjects which has never been published in journal form, or which has been published in journals whose narrow circulation makes access very difficult.

They have published a number of unpublished PhD theses and as well as reprints of old articles that are hard to find. They have a page explaining their policies.

They are connected to, but distinct from, the journal "Theory and Applications of Categories" mentioned in Pace Nielsen's answer.

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Another example in holomorphic dynamics: The paper

Gromov, Mikhaïl On the entropy of holomorphic maps. Enseign. Math., II. Sér. 49, No. 3-4, 217-235 (2003)

is basically the 1977 SUNY preprint (still available from the author's website). Since the beginning it has inspired a lot of research and earned multiple citations. Here is the editors' note appended at the end of the published paper, in my translation from the French (it may need some correction, as I am not as proficient in French as in English, and neither language is my native one):

The preceding article was written in 1976 and has circulated in the form of a SUNY preprint since 1977. We published it "as is", with the exception of the last remark of $\S 4$, adding three references and correcting a small number of misprints. Serge Cantat, whom we thank, kindly agreed to prepare on this occassion a short text to point the reader to some of the numerous works influenced by the article by Mikhaïl Gromov.

Cantat's text, about half a page long, follows the note.

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There were several important unpublished results floating around representation theory for years, including the Langlands classification irreducible admissible representations of real algebraic groups and "Schmid's Thesis". Mimeographed copies of the Langlands paper could be obtained from the IAS. Schmid's thesis was available from University Microfilms (what is now ProQuest). Eventually, Paul Sally and David Vogan assembled five such papers and arranged to have them published by the AMS as a book. This was particularly handy because they were re-typeset in TeX, rather than the old typewriter format with handwritten mathematics. So, in this case, the editors decided to treat the papers as something other than a journal article. See MathSciNet entry for "Representation theory and harmonic analysis on semisimple Lie groups", edited by Paul J. Sally, Jr. and David A. Vogan, Jr. (1989)

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