
University of California Press, Journals + Digital Publishing
Founded in 1893, University of California Press, Journals and Digital Publishing Division disseminates scholarship of enduring value. One of the largest, most distinguished, and innovative of the university presses today, its collection of print and online journals spans topics in the social sciences, humanities, and sciences with concentrations in sociology, musicology, history, religion, cultural and area studies, biological sciences, law, and literature. In addition to publishing its own journals, the division also provides traditional and digital publishing services to many client scholarly societies and associations.
Featured Titles:
Film Quarterly
Film Quarterly has been publishing substantial, peer-reviewed writing on motion pictures since 1958, earning a reputation as the most authoritative academic film journal in the United States. Its wide array of topics, perspectives, and approaches appeals to film scholars and film buffs alike. If you love all types of movies and are eager to encounter new ways of thinking about them, then Film Quarterly is the journal for you!
BioScience
Since 1964, BioScience has presented readers with timely and authoritative overviews of current research in biology, accompanied by essays and discussion sections on education, public policy, history, and the conceptual underpinnings of the biological sciences. BioScience will be published in collaboration with University of California Press, Journals + Digital Publishing beginning in January 2009.
The current issue of Film Quarterly marks the 50th anniversary of this influential journal.
UC Press is pleased to announce that the Executive Office of the American Institute of Biological Sciences (AIBS) has decided to pursue a partnership to provide publishing services for their pretigious journal, BioScience.
Andrew Miller's essay from Representations 98 has been awarded the 2007 Donald Gray Prize for best essay in Victorian studies.
The March issue of the official journal of the National Council on public history examines the changing role of historical sites in engaging participation in civil society.