School Yearbook

The Untold Story of a Cringey Tradition and Its Digital Afterlife

Kate Eichhorn author

Format:Hardback

Publisher:The University of Chicago Press

Publishing:10th Nov '25

£20.00

This title is due to be published on 10th November, and will be despatched as soon as possible.

School Yearbook cover

Why school yearbooks—as frivolous and cringey as they are—are far more than just objects of nostalgia.
 
We’re all familiar with the embarrassment that washes over us when recalling our high school yearbooks. Questionable fashion choices, gravity-defying hair, a melodramatic quote—what were we thinking? Even as school yearbooks decline in popularity among contemporary teens, they continue to impact our lives in shocking ways. Collected, digitized, aggregated, and recombined in ways that would have been impossible to imagine just a few decades ago, yearbooks are no longer bound personal archives of adolescent memories. In the twenty-first century, they are shaping our lives in surprising and sometimes disturbing ways. And what could be a more fitting afterlife for these cringey books?
 
In School Yearbook, cultural critic Kate Eichhorn investigates this ubiquitous object. On the surface, school yearbooks are easily dismissed as innocuous collections of embarrassing photographs and cheesy affirmations, but as Eichhorn reveals, there has never been anything innocent about the school yearbook tradition. Since the early twentieth century, yearbooks have circulated as forms of public relations, propaganda, and hate speech. They have been routinely used by police detectives, private investigators, and even the FBI to identify and profile suspects.  With over half a million yearbooks now available online, these books have also acquired the power to continue shaping our lives long after graduation. Would-be landlords, employers, and even creditors can now turn to data culled from their embarrassing pages to make judgments about who we are and what we merit.
 
In a digital era, school yearbooks have acquired the ability to keep judging us in perpetuity.   Both timely and insightful, School Yearbook explores how these books have always been used to rank and judge us.

"Why do we care so much about yearbooks? As Kate Eichhorn demonstrates, they're not simply records of our awkward adolescent pasts. They also highlight ongoing dilemmas around privacy, hate speech, criminal justice, and more. If you want to understand how Americans have imagined themselves, read this smart little book. And get ready to cringe." -- Jonathan Zimmerman, author of 'Whose America? Culture Wars in the Public Schools'
"The heart of this book is a consideration of the high school yearbook as an American institution with more than a century of historical practice behind it. The yearbook has been so central to American life that telling these stories here will draw interest from a wide range of readers—not just academics in history, education, or journalism, but also teachers and former students of American high schools. Eichhorn and her research team were able detectives who identified interesting questions and knew where to look to find meaningful answers."  -- Henry Jenkins, author of 'Where the Wild Things Were: American Boyhood and Permissive Parenting in Postwar America'

ISBN: 9780226809519

Dimensions: unknown

Weight: 454g

232 pages