by Ken-Hou Lin, Celeste Curington, and Jennifer Lundquist, authors of The Dating Divide: Race and Desire in the Era of Online Romance Dating apps and websites have become the most popular way …
This post is part of our AAA #RaisingOurVoices2020 event blog series. Check out our virtual exhibit page for more. by Roberto J. González, author of Connected: How a Mexican Village Built Its …
We’re pleased to announce that Michelle Lipinski has joined the University of California Press as our new senior acquisitions editor for economics and technology studies. With just three days in the office …
The future of food is inevitably a political and communal thing, and it demands open inquiry and discussion. We get to ask questions over the figurative or literal dinner table.
Recently named a notable opening by the New York Times, The Polaroid Project: At the Intersection of Art and Technology is on view at the Amon Carter Museum of American Art starting on June …
Mark Twain had a lifelong fascination with technology. He was eager to investigate—and invest in—new technologies of his time, from the early typewriter to the telephone. He also was an inventor himself, …
by Adam Bell, co-editor of Vision Anew: The Lens and Screen Arts This guest post is part of a series for World Photo Day. Some of our authors with recent and forthcoming titles …
Do you ever get the feeling Google is ascending to technology overlord status? Siva Vaidhyanathan raises that troubling possibility in a New York Times’ Bits Blog piece about Google’s ever expanding reach …
Much has changed since UC Press’s founding in 1893, and we now face some of the greatest challenges and opportunities in our history. In this new video, UC Press Director Alison Mudditt …
“We need to begin at the beginning. We need to begin at our beginnings”, writes Adam Frank in a recent post on the NPR.org blog 13.7: Cosmos and Culture, to which he …