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The MIT Press

Committed to the daily re-imagining of what a #universitypress can be since 1962. Shares ≠ endorsements

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Our Spring 2026 catalog is here! Highlights include an avian enthusiast's close look at the marvelous engineering of birds, a moving photographic documentary of the Inner Passage, a darkly comedic journey into the science of aging, and a leading expert on race, class, and maternal health's unsettling exploration of the persistence of racism in reproductive healthcare in the US.

Our catalog is free to flip through online via Edelweiss, Issuu, or direct download to your device. Go to the link in our bio to start browsing!


177
4
5 months ago


“The Satie life contains so much murk; his music sparkles with riverine clarity.”

Erik Satie, born on this day in 1866. Follow the link in bio to read an excerpt from Ian Penman's masterful study of the French composer, "Erik Satie: Three Piece Suite" (published by @semiotexte).


61
12 hours ago

In her richly illustrated book "Conjuring the Void," Lynn Gamwell approaches one of the universe’s most mesmerizing and enigmatic phenomena—black holes—through the lens of modern art. Locals: Join the author next week at the @MITMuseum!

📆 Tuesday, May 19th
🕓 6:00 PM
📍314 Main Street | Cambridge, MA, 02142

Copies of the book will be available for purchase and signing after the talk, courtesy of the @MITPressBookstore.

Tap the link in our bio to RSVP.


38
1 days ago

"A carefully crafted, profound critique of meditation and slowness in digital games, 'Zen and Slow Games' takes us on a journey to the boundaries of the medium, detaching playfulness from the pressures of winning and performing otherwise dominant in games and contemporary societies."
—Martin Roth, author of "Unboxing Japanese Videogames"

Head to the link in bio to order your copy or grab the #openaccess edition.


674
5
2 days ago

New York Times columnist Thomas Edsall asked @leahcstokes, a professor of environmental politics and the author of the forthcoming book "The Carbon Wave," how much Trump's fossil fuel handouts and attacks on cheap, clean power are costing the American people. So she sat down and did the math. This year alone, it's on pace to be $1508 per household.

"The big story here is corruption. Trump is doing the bidding of the fossil fuel industry and enriching his friends because they got him elected. I cannot fathom why else he's keeping open these old, dirty, expensive coal plants that were otherwise slated to close in places like Michigan. Someone is getting very rich off these decisions, and everyday Americans are paying the price."

Follow the link in bio to read the full story.


2.8K
50
3 days ago

The human brain hasn't changed much since the Stone Age, let alone in the mere thirty years of the Screen Age. That's why, according to neurologist Richard Cytowic, our brains are so poorly equipped to resist the incursions of Big Tech.

Full of practical actions that we can start taking right away, "Your Stone Age Brain in the Screen Age" offers compelling evidence that we can change the way we use technology, resist its addictive power over us, and take back the control we have lost.

Link in bio to learn more and order.


745
4
4 days ago

“We women were right,” says Susana Carmona, a neuroscientist and director of the neuromaternal lab at Hospital Gregorio Marañón in Madrid. “We knew that something happens to our brains, or the way we perceive the world and the way we feel. Now, we have neuroimaging data that very powerfully demonstrates that motherhood changes you completely.”

Follow the link in bio to read the story, and look out for Susana's new book "A Mother's Brain" this October!


231
5
5 days ago

During the French Revolution, speech — and the ability to hear it clearly — could be a matter of life and death. From Robespierre’s famously quiet oratory to the muffling of King Louis XVI’s final speech in 1793, rapid and unambiguous communication became a revolutionary necessity. To meet that need, Richard Taws chronicles, the French invented a number of strange devices — many of them now forgotten — designed to carry ideas to the masses.

There was the “porte-voix du peuple,” a serpent-like trumpet that amplified the speaker’s voice for large crowds. The “tableau populaire” consisted of paired wooden drums mounted on spindles and set high on a prominent building, resembling the moving panoramas of the 19th century. The “siège oral mobile,” meanwhile, used a giant parabolic screen to bounce a speaker’s voice outward through a latticed floor, and was intended for use by lawmakers inside the meeting hall of the National Assembly.

But few inventions were as transformative as the Chappe brothers’ optical telegraph. With its movable arms arranged in semaphoric code, the device could convey messages across great distances. “At the time the telegraph took hold, an uncluttered,” Taws writes, “transparent sign language was being proposed as a realistic alternative to speech altogether.”

Read the full article at the link in bio.


162
1
6 days ago


In 1954, a small team at TIFR set out to build a digital computer. Most of them had never seen one. None but their lead had trained outside India. By 1959, they had designed and assembled TIFRAC, the first digital computer built by Indian engineers, with specs that rivalled IBM’s first-generation machines. It was obsolete by the time Nehru formally named it in 1962, but what the team proved was far bigger than the machine itself.

On National Technology Day, a look back at where India’s tech story began.

Selections from The Outsourcer: The Story of India’s IT Revolution by NIF Fellow Dinesh C. Sharma.


68
6 days ago

In 1954, a small team at TIFR set out to build a digital computer. Most of them had never seen one. None but their lead had trained outside India. By 1959, they had designed and assembled TIFRAC, the first digital computer built by Indian engineers, with specs that rivalled IBM’s first-generation machines. It was obsolete by the time Nehru formally named it in 1962, but what the team proved was far bigger than the machine itself.

On National Technology Day, a look back at where India’s tech story began.

Selections from The Outsourcer: The Story of India’s IT Revolution by NIF Fellow Dinesh C. Sharma.


68
6 days ago

In 1954, a small team at TIFR set out to build a digital computer. Most of them had never seen one. None but their lead had trained outside India. By 1959, they had designed and assembled TIFRAC, the first digital computer built by Indian engineers, with specs that rivalled IBM’s first-generation machines. It was obsolete by the time Nehru formally named it in 1962, but what the team proved was far bigger than the machine itself.

On National Technology Day, a look back at where India’s tech story began.

Selections from The Outsourcer: The Story of India’s IT Revolution by NIF Fellow Dinesh C. Sharma.


68
6 days ago

In 1954, a small team at TIFR set out to build a digital computer. Most of them had never seen one. None but their lead had trained outside India. By 1959, they had designed and assembled TIFRAC, the first digital computer built by Indian engineers, with specs that rivalled IBM’s first-generation machines. It was obsolete by the time Nehru formally named it in 1962, but what the team proved was far bigger than the machine itself.

On National Technology Day, a look back at where India’s tech story began.

Selections from The Outsourcer: The Story of India’s IT Revolution by NIF Fellow Dinesh C. Sharma.


68
6 days ago

In 1954, a small team at TIFR set out to build a digital computer. Most of them had never seen one. None but their lead had trained outside India. By 1959, they had designed and assembled TIFRAC, the first digital computer built by Indian engineers, with specs that rivalled IBM’s first-generation machines. It was obsolete by the time Nehru formally named it in 1962, but what the team proved was far bigger than the machine itself.

On National Technology Day, a look back at where India’s tech story began.

Selections from The Outsourcer: The Story of India’s IT Revolution by NIF Fellow Dinesh C. Sharma.


68
6 days ago

In 1954, a small team at TIFR set out to build a digital computer. Most of them had never seen one. None but their lead had trained outside India. By 1959, they had designed and assembled TIFRAC, the first digital computer built by Indian engineers, with specs that rivalled IBM’s first-generation machines. It was obsolete by the time Nehru formally named it in 1962, but what the team proved was far bigger than the machine itself.

On National Technology Day, a look back at where India’s tech story began.

Selections from The Outsourcer: The Story of India’s IT Revolution by NIF Fellow Dinesh C. Sharma.


68
6 days ago

In 1954, a small team at TIFR set out to build a digital computer. Most of them had never seen one. None but their lead had trained outside India. By 1959, they had designed and assembled TIFRAC, the first digital computer built by Indian engineers, with specs that rivalled IBM’s first-generation machines. It was obsolete by the time Nehru formally named it in 1962, but what the team proved was far bigger than the machine itself.

On National Technology Day, a look back at where India’s tech story began.

Selections from The Outsourcer: The Story of India’s IT Revolution by NIF Fellow Dinesh C. Sharma.


68
6 days ago


In 1954, a small team at TIFR set out to build a digital computer. Most of them had never seen one. None but their lead had trained outside India. By 1959, they had designed and assembled TIFRAC, the first digital computer built by Indian engineers, with specs that rivalled IBM’s first-generation machines. It was obsolete by the time Nehru formally named it in 1962, but what the team proved was far bigger than the machine itself.

On National Technology Day, a look back at where India’s tech story began.

Selections from The Outsourcer: The Story of India’s IT Revolution by NIF Fellow Dinesh C. Sharma.


68
6 days ago

In 1954, a small team at TIFR set out to build a digital computer. Most of them had never seen one. None but their lead had trained outside India. By 1959, they had designed and assembled TIFRAC, the first digital computer built by Indian engineers, with specs that rivalled IBM’s first-generation machines. It was obsolete by the time Nehru formally named it in 1962, but what the team proved was far bigger than the machine itself.

On National Technology Day, a look back at where India’s tech story began.

Selections from The Outsourcer: The Story of India’s IT Revolution by NIF Fellow Dinesh C. Sharma.


68
6 days ago

In 1954, a small team at TIFR set out to build a digital computer. Most of them had never seen one. None but their lead had trained outside India. By 1959, they had designed and assembled TIFRAC, the first digital computer built by Indian engineers, with specs that rivalled IBM’s first-generation machines. It was obsolete by the time Nehru formally named it in 1962, but what the team proved was far bigger than the machine itself.

On National Technology Day, a look back at where India’s tech story began.

Selections from The Outsourcer: The Story of India’s IT Revolution by NIF Fellow Dinesh C. Sharma.


68
6 days ago

There’s no single experience of pregnancy and motherhood. It can be joyful, disorienting, intimate, exhausting, and inseparable from the cultural forces around it. This Mother’s Day, we’re sharing a selection of books that honor this complexity and examine motherhood through the lenses of design, history, medicine, and art. Follow the link in bio to browse the list.

Images:
1) Two spreads from Designing Motherhood
2) Designing Motherhood
3) Mother Media
4) Expecting Inequity
5) Supervision
6) Ruth Asawa and the Artist-Mother at Midcentury
7) Conceiving Histories
8) Two spreads from Conceiving Histories


153
1 weeks ago

There’s no single experience of pregnancy and motherhood. It can be joyful, disorienting, intimate, exhausting, and inseparable from the cultural forces around it. This Mother’s Day, we’re sharing a selection of books that honor this complexity and examine motherhood through the lenses of design, history, medicine, and art. Follow the link in bio to browse the list.

Images:
1) Two spreads from Designing Motherhood
2) Designing Motherhood
3) Mother Media
4) Expecting Inequity
5) Supervision
6) Ruth Asawa and the Artist-Mother at Midcentury
7) Conceiving Histories
8) Two spreads from Conceiving Histories


153
1 weeks ago

There’s no single experience of pregnancy and motherhood. It can be joyful, disorienting, intimate, exhausting, and inseparable from the cultural forces around it. This Mother’s Day, we’re sharing a selection of books that honor this complexity and examine motherhood through the lenses of design, history, medicine, and art. Follow the link in bio to browse the list.

Images:
1) Two spreads from Designing Motherhood
2) Designing Motherhood
3) Mother Media
4) Expecting Inequity
5) Supervision
6) Ruth Asawa and the Artist-Mother at Midcentury
7) Conceiving Histories
8) Two spreads from Conceiving Histories


153
1 weeks ago


There’s no single experience of pregnancy and motherhood. It can be joyful, disorienting, intimate, exhausting, and inseparable from the cultural forces around it. This Mother’s Day, we’re sharing a selection of books that honor this complexity and examine motherhood through the lenses of design, history, medicine, and art. Follow the link in bio to browse the list.

Images:
1) Two spreads from Designing Motherhood
2) Designing Motherhood
3) Mother Media
4) Expecting Inequity
5) Supervision
6) Ruth Asawa and the Artist-Mother at Midcentury
7) Conceiving Histories
8) Two spreads from Conceiving Histories


153
1 weeks ago

There’s no single experience of pregnancy and motherhood. It can be joyful, disorienting, intimate, exhausting, and inseparable from the cultural forces around it. This Mother’s Day, we’re sharing a selection of books that honor this complexity and examine motherhood through the lenses of design, history, medicine, and art. Follow the link in bio to browse the list.

Images:
1) Two spreads from Designing Motherhood
2) Designing Motherhood
3) Mother Media
4) Expecting Inequity
5) Supervision
6) Ruth Asawa and the Artist-Mother at Midcentury
7) Conceiving Histories
8) Two spreads from Conceiving Histories


153
1 weeks ago

There’s no single experience of pregnancy and motherhood. It can be joyful, disorienting, intimate, exhausting, and inseparable from the cultural forces around it. This Mother’s Day, we’re sharing a selection of books that honor this complexity and examine motherhood through the lenses of design, history, medicine, and art. Follow the link in bio to browse the list.

Images:
1) Two spreads from Designing Motherhood
2) Designing Motherhood
3) Mother Media
4) Expecting Inequity
5) Supervision
6) Ruth Asawa and the Artist-Mother at Midcentury
7) Conceiving Histories
8) Two spreads from Conceiving Histories


153
1 weeks ago

There’s no single experience of pregnancy and motherhood. It can be joyful, disorienting, intimate, exhausting, and inseparable from the cultural forces around it. This Mother’s Day, we’re sharing a selection of books that honor this complexity and examine motherhood through the lenses of design, history, medicine, and art. Follow the link in bio to browse the list.

Images:
1) Two spreads from Designing Motherhood
2) Designing Motherhood
3) Mother Media
4) Expecting Inequity
5) Supervision
6) Ruth Asawa and the Artist-Mother at Midcentury
7) Conceiving Histories
8) Two spreads from Conceiving Histories


153
1 weeks ago

There’s no single experience of pregnancy and motherhood. It can be joyful, disorienting, intimate, exhausting, and inseparable from the cultural forces around it. This Mother’s Day, we’re sharing a selection of books that honor this complexity and examine motherhood through the lenses of design, history, medicine, and art. Follow the link in bio to browse the list.

Images:
1) Two spreads from Designing Motherhood
2) Designing Motherhood
3) Mother Media
4) Expecting Inequity
5) Supervision
6) Ruth Asawa and the Artist-Mother at Midcentury
7) Conceiving Histories
8) Two spreads from Conceiving Histories


153
1 weeks ago

Shoutout to Asterisk Mag for this fantastic Q&A with MITP author Jon Peterson, encompassing 18th century Prussian wargames, cartography, game design, Dungeons & Dragons, AI, and more.

"Don't sell the role-playing in 1824 short. The game was actually played in the feedback loop, in the dialogue. A referee gives you a situation, you play a commander, you are roleplaying somebody in the field. It’s a level of role-playing purity"

Link to the conversation in our bio.


42
1 weeks ago

"An Alphabet for Dreamers" by @sharonsliwinski is a captivating look at how dreams serve as one of our most powerful ways to understand and radically change our world.

Each short chapter engages with a dream from the historical record—from both the recent and distant past—to show how these experiences can help us make sense of profound social conflicts and transform our shared reality.

Featuring original watercolor paintings by @melindajosie

"'An Alphabet for Dreamers' is a stunning and powerful book. Departing from Freud’s view that the true meaning of a dream is a hidden wish-fulfillment, Sliwinski takes dreams to be potent and transparent messages for social change, inspiring Nelson Mandela in his work against apartheid and Harriet Tubman in her work in the Underground Railroad. Dreams for Sliwinski point the way toward righting a world that is out of joint."
@noellemcafee, author of "Feminism: A Quick Immersion"

Learn more and order your copy at the link in our bio.


158
2
1 weeks ago

"An Alphabet for Dreamers" by @sharonsliwinski is a captivating look at how dreams serve as one of our most powerful ways to understand and radically change our world.

Each short chapter engages with a dream from the historical record—from both the recent and distant past—to show how these experiences can help us make sense of profound social conflicts and transform our shared reality.

Featuring original watercolor paintings by @melindajosie

"'An Alphabet for Dreamers' is a stunning and powerful book. Departing from Freud’s view that the true meaning of a dream is a hidden wish-fulfillment, Sliwinski takes dreams to be potent and transparent messages for social change, inspiring Nelson Mandela in his work against apartheid and Harriet Tubman in her work in the Underground Railroad. Dreams for Sliwinski point the way toward righting a world that is out of joint."
@noellemcafee, author of "Feminism: A Quick Immersion"

Learn more and order your copy at the link in our bio.


158
2
1 weeks ago

"An Alphabet for Dreamers" by @sharonsliwinski is a captivating look at how dreams serve as one of our most powerful ways to understand and radically change our world.

Each short chapter engages with a dream from the historical record—from both the recent and distant past—to show how these experiences can help us make sense of profound social conflicts and transform our shared reality.

Featuring original watercolor paintings by @melindajosie

"'An Alphabet for Dreamers' is a stunning and powerful book. Departing from Freud’s view that the true meaning of a dream is a hidden wish-fulfillment, Sliwinski takes dreams to be potent and transparent messages for social change, inspiring Nelson Mandela in his work against apartheid and Harriet Tubman in her work in the Underground Railroad. Dreams for Sliwinski point the way toward righting a world that is out of joint."
@noellemcafee, author of "Feminism: A Quick Immersion"

Learn more and order your copy at the link in our bio.


158
2
1 weeks ago

"An Alphabet for Dreamers" by @sharonsliwinski is a captivating look at how dreams serve as one of our most powerful ways to understand and radically change our world.

Each short chapter engages with a dream from the historical record—from both the recent and distant past—to show how these experiences can help us make sense of profound social conflicts and transform our shared reality.

Featuring original watercolor paintings by @melindajosie

"'An Alphabet for Dreamers' is a stunning and powerful book. Departing from Freud’s view that the true meaning of a dream is a hidden wish-fulfillment, Sliwinski takes dreams to be potent and transparent messages for social change, inspiring Nelson Mandela in his work against apartheid and Harriet Tubman in her work in the Underground Railroad. Dreams for Sliwinski point the way toward righting a world that is out of joint."
@noellemcafee, author of "Feminism: A Quick Immersion"

Learn more and order your copy at the link in our bio.


158
2
1 weeks ago


Guarda le Storie di Instagram in Segreto

Il Visualizzatore Storie Instagram è uno strumento facile da usare che ti permette di guardare e salvare le storie, video, foto o IGTV di Instagram in modo segreto. Con questo servizio puoi scaricare contenuti e goderteli offline ogni volta che vuoi. Se trovi qualcosa di interessante su Instagram che vorresti rivedere più tardi o vuoi vedere le storie restando anonimo, il nostro Visualizzatore è perfetto per te. Anonstories offre una soluzione eccellente per mantenere la tua identità nascosta. Instagram ha lanciato per la prima volta la funzionalità Storie nell'agosto 2023, che è stata rapidamente adottata da altre piattaforme per il suo formato coinvolgente e tempestivo. Le storie permettono agli utenti di condividere aggiornamenti rapidi, che siano foto, video o selfie, arricchiti con testo, emoji o filtri, e sono visibili per solo 24 ore. Questo limite di tempo crea un forte coinvolgimento rispetto ai post normali. Oggi, le storie sono uno dei modi più popolari per connettersi e comunicare sui social media. Tuttavia, quando guardi una storia, il creatore può vedere il tuo nome nella loro lista di visualizzatori, il che potrebbe essere un problema per la privacy. E se desiderassi navigare tra le storie senza essere notato? Ecco dove Anonstories diventa utile. Ti consente di guardare contenuti pubblici su Instagram senza rivelare la tua identità. Basta inserire il nome utente del profilo che ti interessa e lo strumento mostrerà le sue ultime storie. Funzionalità del Visualizzatore Anonstories: - Navigazione Anonima: Guarda le storie senza apparire nella lista di visualizzazione. - Nessun Account Necessario: Visualizza contenuti pubblici senza registrarti su Instagram. - Download dei Contenuti: Salva qualsiasi contenuto delle storie direttamente sul tuo dispositivo per un uso offline. - Guarda i Punti Salienti: Accedi ai punti salienti di Instagram, anche oltre la finestra di 24 ore. - Monitoraggio dei Repost: Tieni traccia dei repost o dei livelli di interazione nelle storie per i profili personali. Limitazioni: - Questo strumento funziona solo con account pubblici; gli account privati restano inaccessibili. Vantaggi: - Privacy: Guarda qualsiasi contenuto su Instagram senza essere notato. - Semplice e Facile: Nessuna installazione di app o registrazione richiesta. - Strumenti Esclusivi: Scarica e gestisci contenuti in modi che Instagram non offre.

Vantaggi di Anonstories

Esplora le Storie IG in Privato

Segui gli aggiornamenti di Instagram discretamente proteggendo la tua privacy e restando anonimo.


Visualizzatore Privato di Instagram

Guarda profili e foto in modo anonimo facilmente usando il Visualizzatore di profili privati.


Visualizzatore di Storie Gratuito

Questo strumento gratuito ti permette di visualizzare le storie di Instagram in modo anonimo, garantendo che la tua attività rimanga nascosta dall'utente che carica la storia.

Domande frequenti

 
Anonimato

Anonstories consente agli utenti di guardare le storie di Instagram senza avvisare il creatore.

 
Compatibilità Dispositivi

Funziona senza problemi su iOS, Android, Windows, macOS e browser moderni come Chrome e Safari.

 
Sicurezza e Privacy

Garantisce una navigazione sicura e anonima senza richiedere credenziali di accesso.

 
Nessuna Registrazione

Gli utenti possono visualizzare storie pubbliche semplicemente inserendo un nome utente—nessun account richiesto.

 
Formati Supportati

Scarica foto (JPEG) e video (MP4) facilmente.

 
Costo

Il servizio è gratuito.

 
Account Privati

Il contenuto degli account privati è accessibile solo ai follower.

 
Utilizzo dei File

I file sono destinati solo a uso personale o educativo e devono rispettare le normative sul copyright.

 
Come Funziona

Inserisci un nome utente pubblico per visualizzare o scaricare storie. Il servizio genera link diretti per salvare i contenuti localmente.