An Oxford professor traces the history of publishing through the lives of its most daring and dedicated pioneers.
Han Kang’s fiction is always richly evocative and this book, with events taking place in a snowstorm and spurred by a race ...
Like air, humanities-driven work is everywhere but taken for granted, so much a part of life it’s easy to overlook. A ...
MANHATTAN, N.Y. ( PIX11) – A preschool in New York City’s Upper West Side faces questions after a substitute teacher, who’s ...
A Man of Parts and Learning” is the first winner of this year’s Sidney Awards, which I created in honor of philosopher and ...
In his book “American Oasis,” Kyle Paoletta explores the region’s environmental and cultural struggles and what they mean for the rest of the nation. In Adam Ross’s long-awaited second ...
A new paper warns that large language models (LLMs) like ChatGPT aren't just changing how we interact with technology, ...
After publishing a definitive biography of Rodin, she went on to write about the underappreciated women who modeled for the ...
Artificial intelligence (AI) and AI-enabled robots are becoming a bigger part of our daily lives. Real-time, flexible ...
When a robot dog dances jazz, does it align with our ethical expectations? As AI rapidly advances, robots are becoming smarter and more human-like, presenting new ethical challenges. In a new book, ...
It has been tempting to view the C.I.A. as omniscient. Yet Coll’s chastening new book about the events leading up to the Iraq War, in 2003, shows just how often the agency was flying blind.
Little, Brown lands a new novel from Women’s Prize for Fiction winner Naomi Alderman, FSG takes a memoir from World Wide Web inventor Tim Berners-Lee, and more.