Founded in 1926 with the publication of an edition of lectures on atomic dynamics by Max Born, the MIT Press took its present form in 1962 and has continued to publish genre-crossing works with a list ...
The MIT Press Reader is a non-profit digital magazine that aims to illuminate the bold ideas and voices that make up the ...
The textbook publisher will transfer to the MIT Press as of July 2025 in time for Fall 2025 course adoptions. The MIT Press is proud to announce the acquisition of textbook publisher University ...
Workforce Ecosystems: Reaching Strategic Goals with People, Partners, and Technologies By Elizabeth J. Altman, SM ’92; David Kiron, Sloan Management Review editorial director of research; Jeff ...
The MIT Press, a university press affiliated with the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, has launched the MIT Press Open Architecture and Urban Studies, an exhaustive digital collection of rare, ...
The MIT Press, in collaboration with the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation, is set to digitize landmark out-of-print architecture and urban studies books published by the MIT Press, making them freely ...
David Weinberger, PhD, is an author, philosopher, and researcher at Harvard’s metaLAB, with a 20-year affiliation with Harvard’s Berkman Klein Center. He is the editor of MIT Press’s open-access book ...
Cambridge, MA – May 16, 2024 – The MIT Press announces the release of a report on its Direct to Open (D2O) program detailing the impact that it has had in its first three years. Launched in 2021, D2O ...
Black Elegies by Kimberly Juanita Brown is an unflinching study of black grief as a form of elegy. Brown asks: How do you mourn those you are not supposed to see? And where does the grief go? She ...
In an unprecedented partnership, two Boston-area publishers—Candlewick Press and MIT Press—have announced plans to collaboratively launch two imprints for children and teen readers, starting in 2021.
To continue reading this content, please enable JavaScript in your browser settings and refresh this page. Amy Brand has made a name for herself by shaking things up ...