Rice University Press Explained

Rice University Press
Parent:Rice University
Status:defunct
Founded:1985 (Original press)
2006 (Digital-only press)
Founders:-->
Country:United States
Headquarters:Houston, Texas

The Rice University Press was a publishing house, a division of Rice University. Founded in 1985, the original version of the press shut down in 1996. In 2006, the organization was re-launched as the first fully digital university press in the United States.[1] [2]

Under its digital publication model, manuscripts were solicited, reviewed, edited and resubmitted for final approval by an editorial board of prominent scholars, but the finished books were published free of charge via Connexions, an open-source e-publishing platform. The technology offered authors a way to use multimedia to craft dynamic scholarly arguments, and to publish on-demand original works in fields of study that were increasingly constrained by print publishing.[3] [4] [5]

In August 2010, Rice University confirmed that the press, despite being digital-only, had become too expensive to maintain.[6] Rice University Press shut down operations in September 2010.

See also

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Boles . John B. . Rice University . May 16, 2024 . May 3, 2019.
  2. Web site: Reborn Digital: The First Fully Digital University Press: A Three Year Experiment in the United States . May 16, 2024 . History of Information.
  3. Web site: July 13, 2006 . Rice University Press reborn as nation’s first fully digital academic press . May 16, 2024 . Rice University.
  4. Web site: Jaschik . Scott . August 19, 2010 . Abandoning an Experiment . May 16, 2024 . . en.
  5. News: Buckman . Rebecca . Rice University Revives Its Press In Digital Model . May 16, 2024 . . en-US. July 13, 2006.
  6. Web site: Howard . Jennifer . August 19, 2010 . Rice U. to Close Its Digital Press Next Month . registration . April 11, 2011 . The Chronicle of Higher Education: PageView.