MIT Press’s Direct to Open opens access to full list of 2024 monographs
Nine open-access books cross 10,000 reads threshold, bringing total for Direct to Open titles to almost 425,000.
Nine open-access books cross 10,000 reads threshold, bringing total for Direct to Open titles to almost 425,000.
An MIT-based white paper identifies leading questions in the quest to make open-access publications sustainable.
With support from 322 libraries — a 33 percent increase in participation over its first year — the D2O publishing model will include over 160 scholarly monographs and edited collections by the end of 2023.
Enjoy these recent titles from Institute faculty and staff.
The iconic MIT Press colophon symbolizes the legacy of its creator Muriel Cooper, a graphic design pioneer and longtime member of the MIT community.
MIT scholar Mikael Jakobsson’s new book examines the not-so-subtle worldview contained in many prominent board games.
The MIT Press Bookstore staff member charms and amazes with his talent for writing in palindrome — or prose that reads the same forward and backward.
The grants expand funding for authors whose work brings diverse and chronically underrepresented perspectives to scholarship in the arts, humanities, and sciences.
Shift+OPEN will flip existing subscription-based journals to a diamond open access publishing model.
Inaugural WORLDING workshops matched world-class climate story teams with relevant labs and researchers across MIT.
Koch Institute event celebrates the new MIT Press biography “Salvador Luria: An Immigrant Biologist in Cold War America.”
Eighty scholarly monographs and edited collections partially funded by libraries participating in MIT Press’s Direct to Open model will publish openly this year.
Enjoy these recent titles from Institute faculty and staff.
The reshaped series will integrate a wide range of disciplines — from mathematics to critical race theory, from software art to queer theory — to understand the social and cultural implications of software.
This aspect of syntax helps us do much more than just build sentences, linguist Shigeru Miyagawa contends.