Bold Ideas, Essential Reading since 1936.
Rutgers University Press is dedicated to the advancement and dissemination of knowledge for a wide range of readers. The Press reflects and extends the University’s core mission of research, instruction, and service. They enhance the work of their authors through exceptional publications that shape critical issues, spark debate, and enrich teaching. Core subjects include: film and media studies, sociology, anthropology, education, history, health, history of medicine, human rights, urban studies, criminal justice, Jewish studies, American studies, women's, gender, and sexuality studies, LGBTQ, Latino/a, Asian and African studies, as well as books about New York, New Jersey, and the region.
Rutgers also distributes books published by Bucknell University Press.
Dying to Count
Post-Abortion Care and Global Reproductive Health Politics in Senegal
Dreams of Archives Unfolded
Absence and Caribbean Life Writing
Bollywood’s New Woman
Liberalization, Liberation, and Contested Bodies
Scarlet and Black, Volume Three
Making Black Lives Matter at Rutgers, 1945-2020
Scarlet and Black (3 volume set)
Scarlet and Black documents the history of Rutgers’s connection to slavery, which was neither casual nor accidental—nor unusual. Like most early American colleges, Rutgers depended on slaves to build its campuses and serve its students and faculty; it depended on the sale of black people to fund its very existence.
A COVID Charter, A Better World
Folk Stories from the Hills of Puerto Rico / Cuentos folklóricos de las montañas de Puerto Rico
Esta nueva y emocionante antología bilingüe reúne cuentos populares puertorriqueños que se transmitieron oralmente durante generaciones antes de ser transcritos comenzando en 1914 por el equipo del famoso antropólogo Franz Boas. La colección incluye historias sobre personajes históricos como el pirata Roberto Cofresí, versiones criollas de “Blanca Nieves” y “Cenicienta” y otros queridos personajes locales como la amable cucaracha Cucarachita Martina.
The Street
A Photographic Field Guide to American Inequality
The Latinx Files
Race, Migration, and Space Aliens
Playing with History
American Identities and Children’s Consumer Culture
Pink and Blue
Gender, Culture, and the Health of Children
Marriage, Gender and Refugee Migration
Spousal Relationships among Somali Muslims in the United Kingdom
Life in a Cambodian Orphanage
A Childhood Journey for New Opportunities
Branding Brazil
Transforming Citizenship on Screen
Back to the Roots
Memory, Inequality, and Urban Agriculture
American Hotel
The Waldorf-Astoria and the Making of a Century
All My Friends Live in My Computer
Trauma, Tactical Media, and Meaning
Securitizing Youth
Young People’s Roles in the Global Peace and Security Agenda
Securitizing Youth
Young People's Roles in the Global Peace and Security Agenda
The Guise of Exceptionalism
Unmasking the National Narratives of Haiti and the United States
Not Your Mother's Mammy
The Black Domestic Worker in Transatlantic Women’s Media
Not Your Mother's Mammy
The Black Domestic Worker in Transatlantic Women's Media
Not Your Mother’s Mammy examines how black artists, mostly women of the diaspora, many of them former domestics, reconstruct the black female subjectivities of domestics in black media. In doing so, they undermine and defamiliarize the reductive, one-dimensional images of black domestics as perpetual victims lacking voice and agency. In line with international movements like #MeToo and #timesup, the women in these stories demand to be heard.