Founded in 1945, the University Press of Florida is the official publisher of the State University System of Florida. UPF has published over 2,500 books since its inception and currently releases approximately 80 new titles each year. Its publishing strengths include archaeology, history, literature, Latin American studies, African American studies, space studies, sustainability, and Florida history and culture. UPF engages educators, students, and discerning readers by producing works of global significance, regional importance, and lasting value.
University Press of Florida also includes the imprint, University of Florida Press.
Approaches to Monumental Landscapes of the Ancient Maya
- Copyright year: 2020
The Odd, the Unusual, and the Strange
Bioarchaeological Explorations of Atypical Burials
Maritime Communities of the Ancient Andes
- Copyright year: 2020
Historical Archaeology and Indigenous Collaboration
Discovering Histories That Have Futures
Highlighting the strong relationship between New England’s Nipmuc people and their land from the pre-contact period to the present day, this book helps demonstrate that the history of Native Americans did not end with the arrival of Europeans. This is the rich result of a twenty-year collaboration between Indigenous and nonindigenous authors, who use their own example to argue that Native peoples need to be integral to any research project focused on Indigenous history and culture.
Wild Capital
Nature’s Economic and Ecological Wealth
In Wild Capital, Barbara Jones demonstrates that looking at nature through the lens of the marketplace is a surprisingly effective approach to protecting the environment. Showing that policy-makers and developers rarely associate wild places with monetary values, Jones argues that nature should be viewed as a capital asset like any other in order for environmental preservation to be a competitive alternative to construction projects.
The Maritime Heritage of the Cayman Islands
- Copyright year: 2019
The Archaeology of Southeastern Native American Landscapes of the Colonial Era
This volume describes the ways Native American populations accommodated and resisted the encroachment of European powers in southeastern North America from the arrival of Spaniards in the sixteenth century to the first decades of the American Republic. Tracing changes to the region’s natural, cultural, social, and political environments, Charles Cobb provides an unprecedented survey of the landscape histories of Indigenous groups across this critically important area and time period.
- Copyright year: 2019
The Archaeology of Human-Environmental Dynamics on the North American Atlantic Coast
- Copyright year: 2019
Authority, Autonomy, and the Archaeology of a Mississippian Community
This book is the first detailed investigation of the important archaeological site of Parchman Place in the Mississippi Delta, a defining area for understanding the Mississippian culture that spanned much of what is now the United States Southeast and Midwest before the fifteenth century.
- Copyright year: 2019
Deadly Virtue
Fort Caroline and the Early Protestant Roots of American Whiteness
- Copyright year: 2019
NASA and the Long Civil Rights Movement
Examining the ways in which NASA’s goal of space exploration both conflicted and aligned with the cause of racial equality, this volume provides new insights into the complex relationship between the space program and the civil rights movement in the Jim Crow South and abroad.
- Copyright year: 2019
Borderland Smuggling
Patriots, Loyalists, and Illicit Trade in the Northeast, 1783-1820
- Copyright year: 2019