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UC Press Awarded Major Grant for California Studies Initiative

April 10, 2009 (Berkeley, CA) -- University of California Press (UC Press) is pleased to announce it has received a major grant from The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation to fund a strategic initiative in California Studies. The $722,000 award will support the creation of a journal, working papers collection, and annual conference in this emerging field.

Creating a multi-campus research and teaching initiative in California Studies is among the University of California’s most important current priorities. “Support from the Mellon Foundation is critically important at a variety of levels,” states University of California (UC) Vice Provost Daniel Greenstein, “lending credibility to an evolving field of scholarly inquiry while at the same time enabling substantial innovation on the part of UC Press and the partners it has invited into this venture.”

The collaborative project will be led by UC Press in partnership with a number of organizations both within and outside UC, including the UC Humanities Research Institute (UCHRI), the UC California Studies Consortium (UCCSC), and the California Digital Library (CDL). The interdisciplinary, peer-reviewed journal, which will be published in both print and digital editions, will draw on perspectives from numerous disciplines, including history, literature, anthropology, sociology, politics, ecology, and the visual arts. The journal will be supported by a collection of working papers, which will allow scholars in the field to post work in progress and invite comment. In addition, an annual conference will help guide the continuing development of the field.

UCHRI Director David Theo Goldberg states, “This project is crucial to the long-term viability, stability, and expanding capacity of UC’s California Studies initiative to impact scholarship across a range of fields. Furthermore, it is instrumental to reaching citizens and policymakers outside of academia, as well as communities beyond state borders.”

Books on California and the West have formed a major part of UC Press’s editorial program for decades. In recent years California has become a vital topic of research, teaching, and policy debate. Recent trends suggest California has assumed a level of demographic and economic power that is reconfiguring the politics and economics of the United States, the Pacific region, and the world. The state’s increasingly global reach is evident in its immigrant population, which is among the most diverse anywhere.

“The relations between California and the larger world constitute subjects of compelling importance not only for scholars but for the public at large,” asserts Louis S. Warren, W. Turrentine Jackson Professor of Western U.S. History at UC Davis and a member of the UCCSC steering committee. “To my mind, there could be no better home for the new journal than UC Press, one of the nation’s leading academic publishers and one of the few in the world that has the ability to bring scholarship to a broad public audience.”

The Mellon Foundation’s grant will enable UC Press and its partners to broaden the forum for scholarly communication in California Studies, provide an interdisciplinary venue for new research findings, foster interconnections among scholars, and serve as an incubator for more extensive research and publications.

“We are deeply grateful to the Mellon Foundation for fostering scholarship in California Studies at this critical moment,” notes UC Press Director Lynne Withey. “We look forward to collaborating with our partners throughout the scholarly community to disseminate the results of the Foundation’s investment to a wide and diverse international audience.”

April 09, 2009 in California & The West, Publishing News, UC Press News | Permalink

UC Press Podcasts Featuring, Jeri Quinzio and Allison J. Pugh

We are pleased to announce that Episodes 11 and 12 of the UC Press podcast series are now available. In February's episodes, Chris Gondek of Heron and Crane Productions interviews a sociologist and a food writer.

Jeri Quinzio talks about the history of ice cream in her newest book, Of Sugar and Snow: A History of Ice Cream Making. Allison J. Pugh discusses parenting and consumer culture in her book, Longing and Beloning: Parents, Children and Consumer Culture.

You may subscribe to the monthly podcast feed that contains the individual episodes using your RSS aggregator or directly via the iTunes store.  You can listen to individual author interviews from the episodes at our podcast page.

Listen to an interview with Jeri Quinzio, author of Of Sugar and Snow.

Listen to an interview with Allison J. Pugh, author of Longing and Belonging.


February 04, 2009 in American Studies, Food & Wine, History, Publishing News, Sociology, UC Press News | Permalink | TrackBack (0)

Technorati Tags: Allison J. Pugh, American Studies, Food and Drink, History, History of Food, History of Ice Cream, Ice Cream, Jeri Quinzio, Pop Culture, Social Problems, Sociology, UC Press, University of California Press

UC Press Podcast Featuring, Jeffrey Vance, Tony Maietta, Russell Leigh Sharman, and Cheryl Harris Sharman

We are pleased to announce that Episode 8 of the UC Press podcast series is now available. In November's episode, Chris Gondek of Heron and Crane Productions interviews a film historian/producer and an art director, on a very influential silent film star, and then a husband and wife tandem that examines night workers in the Big Apple.

First he interviews Jeffrey Vance and Tony Maietta, authors of Douglas Fairbanks. Second, it's Russell Leigh Sharman and Cheryl Harris Sharman, authors of Nightshift NYC. You may subscribe to the monthly podcast feed that contains the individual episodes using your RSS aggregator or directly via the iTunes store.  You can listen to individual author interviews from the episodes at www.ucpress.edu/podcast or on the individual book pages using the embedded player.

Listen to an interview with Jeffrey Vance and Tony Maietta, authors of Douglas Fairbanks.

Listen to an interview with Russell Leigh Sharman and Cheryl Harris Sharman, authors of Nightshift NYC.

November 05, 2008 in Anthropology, Author Interviews, Cinema & Performance Arts, Publishing News, Sociology, UC Press News | Permalink | TrackBack (0)

Technorati Tags: Anthropology, Biographies, Cheryl Harris Sharman, Cinema, Cultural Anthropology, Douglas Fairbanks, Film, Film Studies, Jeffrey Vance, New York City, Nightshift NYC, Podcasts, Russell Leigh Sharman, Silent Cinema, Sociology, UC Press, University of California Press, Urban Studies

Amazon Kindling New Interest in eBooks?

Amazon's unveiling of their new ebook reader, the Kindle, has generated much attention in both publishing circles and in the general media.  Everybody seems to have an opinion about the Kindle.  The most recent high-profile discussion of the merits of the Amazon Kindle was a piece by Randall Stross in the January 27th edition of the New York Times.

From the beginning, Amazon has been betting that the Kindle will be to book lovers what the iPod has been to music lovers.  Whether the Kindle really catches fire (no pun intended) or lands on the ash heap of failed attempts to digitize the general book business, I do think the conversations about books that the unveiling of the Kindle have started have been profitable for both consumers, publishers, and other people involved in the book trade. 

UC Press has agreed to participate in the Kindle program, and Amazon is in the process of preparing a few dozen files for inclusion as downloadable ebooks for the Kindle reader, so we don't currently have a big stake in this.  But from the media attention that's been lavished on this homely little ebook reading device, one would think that the future of the book business hinged upon its success.  Is it all hyperbole?

From the time I first saw a prototype of the device, I had my doubts that people would want yet another gadget, let alone an expensive gadget, in order to read digital books.  This is, unfortunately, a limitation of today's digital book reading technology.  The very technology that currently makes digital books more readable on screen, E-ink technology, requires a different display than your computer monitor, cell phone, or PDA use.  Indeed, Joe Wikert of John Wiley and Sons recently blogged about this on the Teleread ebook blog, positing that the ideal gadget for reading digital books would be a laptop that is somehow e-ink enabled.

Ultimately, though, Randall Stross's piece in the New York Times, spends less time discussing the technology behind the Kindle and more time discussing how the fate of reading book length treatments of anything in this country might be joined at the hip with wider adoption of electronic reading devices.  The book industry (it has been pointed out many times before) is one of the few entertainment industries that has stubbornly resisted digitization.  This is partly attributable to intellectual property issues with digital books and with borrowed material contained within books themselves, which isn't so much an issue for, say, musical compositions, unless they contain tons of samples.  It's also partially attributable to a sense that a book is in and of itself an aesthetic object, and avid readers from the time they start reading beautifully illustrated, four-color children's books are brought up with this mentality.  And, well, frankly, things just don't move along very quickly in the book business.  But, mostly, readers just haven't take to reading books online, although they're increasingly reading tons of other stuff online.

While none of these things is likely to change overnight, I think that the heat is being turned up by a younger generation that is accustomed to reading on screen and wants instant gratification.  But whether ebooks are ultimately widely adopted turns on not the technology itself but whether or not avid readers (those 20% of the population who buy the overwhelming number of the books sold in this country) begin to turn to ebooks.  Gadget collectors and technophiles won't make or break the ebook business–avid readers will. It also hinges upon whether this country will continue to produce avid readers of books, and some anecdotal evidence from a recent Frontline piece on social networking suggested we might be having some difficulty in this area.

Nonetheless, Amazon is in an excellent position to deliver the goods to these avid readers.  People may argue about Amazon's use of a proprietary format and digital rights management to lock down Kindle ebooks, but for users who just want to get on with the business of reading and who don't care much about managing their ebook collections, these features make this system easy to work with.  This could be the real upside to what Amazon has done.

If the Kindle itself hasn't delivered the future of the ebook, the conversations generated by its introduction have at least given us a glimpse. 

February 01, 2008 in Current Affairs, Digital Publishing, Publishing News | Permalink | Comments (1)

Technorati Tags: amazon, ebook, kindle

Textbook Blues–Students Face Another Semester

With students returning to college campuses across the country, textbooks are on the minds of students and faculty everywhere.  Chuck Crumly, the Science Publisher at the University of California Press, takes some time to reflect on the current state of the textbook business in the United States.

The cost of undergraduate textbooks has become more and more difficult for the average student to afford.  At the same time commercial publishers have invested more and more on the average college textbook requiring a larger and larger return on investment.  This "vicious circle" has been cycling.  Thus, it is not uncommon for a college textbook to cost more than $100 and include ancillary materials, test banks, pedagogical software, color in print and on web sites and more–all to gain the edge in an arms race with competitors.  The victims of this arms race are the students.

Both professors and students are beginning to rise up.  Professors remember the days when they could afford their textbooks and they are guilty about assigning textbooks whose prices seem extraordinary.  Students no longer buy their textbooks new - tattered used copies are okay.  There are even companies that now allow student to rent their books.  Commercial publishers are aware of these trends and have responded by escalating the arms race with new editions and even more elaborate course ancillary materials.

The down side is the fate of the more specialized - and more interesting - upper division courses intended for small class sizes and not taught at all colleges and universities.  Commercial publishers are abandoning these courses - texts in these course do not generate enough revenue.  Paradoxically, these are the courses that are intended for the students who will become the professors of the next generation.  And they will be assigning textbooks.  In a real way, commercial publishers are abandoning their future customers.

What should be done?  More next time.

January 18, 2008 in Publishing News | Permalink

Technorati Tags: spring semester, textbooks

Redroom.com & Booktour.com Roll Out the Red Carpet for Authors

Redroomlogo The San Francisco Chronicle reported today that Redroom.com is in full public beta.  It aims to connect readers with writers by providing an author a blog that can include a variety of content.  According to the website information page:

Through original, author-generated content, we offer a trustworthy and creative social network unlike any other. Here, you can connect with your favorite authors, access current industry news, and comment on engaging features. By fostering true community between authors and readers, Red Room showcases esteemed writers and inspires the next generation. We also give back to the community we aim to nurture with our commitment to the Causes We Support.

Transparent

Booktour.com is another site that caters to authors that is also in public beta.  With Booktour.com authors create their own page (biography, books, tour dates and availability) and any group looking for speakers can find them and contact them directly to arrange for an appearance.  Booktour.com also allows readers to connect with authors by allowing them to search for authors who will be appearing in their area.  Among the site's founders is Chris Anderson, the author of The Long Tail.  According to Booktour's information page:

For authors, BookTour.com serves as a one-stop tool for book promotion, allowing authors at all levels of their careers to locate receptive live audiences. For readers and audiences, BookTour.com makes finding when a favorite author is coming to your town as easy as checking the weather.

The goal of both sites is to involve authors more in the promotion of their own works and to connect readers with writers in ways that writers, publishers, and supply-chain partners alone might not be able to.  Statistics continue to reveal that greater and greater numbers of us are spending more and more time online, and there's a definitely a niche to be filled in connecting avid readers with books and authors.

A definite advantage to such sites is that as long as they remain inclusive they have the potential to provide "one stop shopping" for readers who are looking to connect with books or authors.  They also can exploit the power of easy-to-use, self-service Web 2.0 interfaces that allow authors and publishers to disseminate information about authors as personalities that previously might have been unavailable to readers.   Such efforts to create communities of readers by publishers themselves can often be hampered by the fact that many readers don't necessarily connect a book to its publisher.

Recent statistics indicate that about 20-25% of consumers buy nearly 80% of the books in the United States, so look for more similarly ambitious efforts to connect these avid readers with the book and authors they love in the near future.

January 08, 2008 in Publishing News, Web & Technology | Permalink | Comments (0)

Technorati Tags: booktour, Chris Anderson, redroom, social networking

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