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Columbia University Press has submitted contact information for all Press authors listed in the settlement. If your book was included in the list. You should be receiving a notice from the Settlement Administrator.  Please follow the instructions to submit a claim. If you do not receive a notice but believe you are a class member, you should check the Anthropic Works List Lookup. For more information, please visit the Anthropic Copyright Settlement Website.

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Graphic featuring the book cover No Fear, No Failure: Five Principles for Sustaining Growth Through Innovation by Lorraine H. Marchand. The cover is teal with bold yellow text reading “No Fear No Failure,” surrounded by small directional arrows. To the right, large text reads “Lorraine H. Marchand on No Fear, No Failure,” with a vertical “Q&A” label on the left side.

Lorraine H. Marchand discusses what inspired the book, how fear operates within organizations, and what leaders can do to unlock innovation.

The post

Lorraine H. Marchand on No Fear, No Failure

first appeared on Columbia University Press Blog.

Featured image with book cover of How Film Became History by Thomas Doherty, showing a black-and-white Nazi book burning scene, alongside text reading “Why We Remember the Nazi Book Burning” and the author’s name.

Thomas Doherty examines how 1933 Nazi book burnings became a lasting symbol of censorship, shaped by widely circulated newsreel footage and propaganda.

The post

Why We Remember the Nazi Book Burning

Thomas Doherty

first appeared on Columbia University Press Blog.

Featured image showing the book cover of The Virtual Universe by Andreas Kaplan, with a teal background and colorful abstract dots, alongside the headline “Andreas Kaplan on The Virtual Universe” on a gradient backdrop.

Andreas Kaplan reflects on how the virtual universe could transform universities, redefine learning, and even challenge the role of human professors.

The post

Andreas Kaplan on The Virtual Universe

first appeared on Columbia University Press Blog.

Book cover of Lyric Logic: How Modern American Poetry Reasons by Johanna Winant alongside text reading “Johanna Winant on Lyric Logic” with Q&A label.

In this Q&A Winant explains how poetry doesn’t just illustrate or allude to philosophy—it does philosophy.

The post

Johanna Winant on Lyric Logic

first appeared on Columbia University Press Blog.

Featured blog image showing a book cover titled “Cities in Action: Organizations, Institutions, and Urban Climate Strategies” by Christof Brandtner on the left, with an illustrated scene of futuristic, dome-like urban structures in a watery landscape. On the right, large text reads: “Five Reasons Why Urbanists and Organizational Scholars Should Read Each Other’s Work” with the author’s name, Christof Brandtner, highlighted below. A vertical “AUTHOR POST” label appears along the left edge.

Christof Brandtner explores why urbanists and organizational scholars must connect insights to better understand and advance climate action in cities.

The post

Five Reasons Why Urbanists and Organizational Scholars Should Read Each Other’s Work

Christof Brandtner

first appeared on Columbia University Press Blog.