Showing 401-440 of 2,894 items.

Urbanism and Empire in Roman Sicily

University of Texas Press

Examining patterns of urban settlement and abandonment across several centuries, this book offers the first comprehensive overview of Sicily’s strategic importance to ancient Rome and broader Mediterranean-wide networks.

More info

The Codex Mexicanus

A Guide to Life in Late Sixteenth-Century New Spain

University of Texas Press

This groundbreaking book offers the first scholarly analysis of the entire Codex Mexicanus, an enigmatic sixteenth-century pictorial manuscript, and shows how it helped the Aztec adapt to life in colonial Mexico

More info

Portraying the Aztec Past

The Codices Boturini, Azcatitlan, and Aubin

University of Texas Press

Offering the first extended comparison of three closely related painted manuscripts from colonial Mexico, this book reveals how differences in their materials and composition show the evolution of the native pictorial tradition.

More info

Moving In and Out of Islam

University of Texas Press

With empirical case studies from Western and Central Europe, the United States, Canada, and the Middle East, this anthology opens a new field of study by exploring people’s rationales for leaving, as well as converting to, Islam.

More info

Love, Sex, and Desire in Modern Egypt

Navigating the Margins of Respectability

University of Texas Press

Combining vivid stories of love affairs with classic anthropological theories of kinship, gift-giving, and honor, this rich ethnography documents how ideals of relationships and respectability clash with the reality of life in modern Cairo.

More info

No Alternative

Childbirth, Citizenship, and Indigenous Culture in Mexico

University of Texas Press

Contrasting the birthing practices of upper-class and indigenous women, this ethnography of the alternative birth movement in Mexico offers new understandings of female empowerment, citizenship, and the commodification of indigenous culture.

More info

Managed Migrations

Growers, Farmworkers, and Border Enforcement in the Twentieth Century

University of Texas Press

Managed Migrations examines the concurrent development of a border agricultural industry and changing methods of border enforcement in the Rio Grande Valley of Texas during the past century.

More info

Hollywood in San Francisco

Location Shooting and the Aesthetics of Urban Decline

University of Texas Press

This pioneering study of postwar feature films set in San Francisco tracks the transformation of Hollywood filmmaking as location shooting became the dominant production method in an era of urban anxiety.

More info

Beyoncé in Formation

Remixing Black Feminism

University of Texas Press

In this enthralling, empowering “mixtape” memoir, a visionary feminist scholar retraces her personal journey while reflecting on the painful legacies and exhilarating liberations that permeate Beyoncé’s game-changing Lemonade album.

More info

São Paulo

A Graphic Biography

Edited by Felipe Correa
University of Texas Press

This extensively illustrated, bilingual English-Portuguese volume traces the physical development of Brazil’s largest city and presents a blueprint for transforming its aging industrial areas into mixed-use affordable housing districts.

More info

The Devil's Fork

By Bill Wittliff; Illustrated by Edward Carey
University of Texas Press

In this engrossing conclusion to The Devil’s Backbone and The Devil’s Sinkhole, the young man Papa and his cowboy amigo Calley Pearsall encounter relentless enemies and supernatural helpers as their escapades drive them toward the Devil’s Fork.

More info

The Art of Solidarity

Visual and Performative Politics in Cold War Latin America

University of Texas Press

Examining artistic production in solidarity movements throughout the Cold War era, this multidisciplinary anthology reveals the tremendous role that art and performance have played in the quest for social justice in the Americas.

More info

Leaving the Gay Place

Billy Lee Brammer and the Great Society

University of Texas Press

The award-winning author of The Last Love Song: A Biography of Joan Didion traces the cultural upheavals of mid-century America through the life of Billy Lee Brammer, author of the classic political novel The Gay Place.

More info

Houston Rap Tapes

An Oral History of Bayou City Hip-Hop

University of Texas Press

Portraying a vibrant, but often overlooked, music scene, this amplified edition of Houston Rap Tapes includes new interviews of Scarface, Slim Thug, Lez Moné, B L A C K I E, Lil’ Keke, and Sire Jukebox of the original Ghetto Boys, as well as many addition

More info

The Neoliberal Diet

Healthy Profits, Unhealthy People

University of Texas Press

Analyzing international data regarding food production and social inequality, especially in the NAFTA region, this book convincingly argues that neoliberal regimes, not individuals, have created the global obesity epidemic.

More info

The Iranian Diaspora

Challenges, Negotiations, and Transformations

University of Texas Press

Original essays by leading scholars of diaspora offer the first comparative overview of the worldwide migration of Iranians since the revolution and the challenges they have faced in assimilating into new societies.

More info

On Story—The Golden Ages of Television

Edited by Maya Perez and Barbara Morgan; Introduction by Noah Hawley; By Austin Film Festival
University of Texas Press

Award-winning television creators and writers discuss the evolution of TV storytelling in these lively conversations from the acclaimed PBS series On Story.

More info

A Mile Above Texas

University of Texas Press

Stunning aerial photographs taken during a 3,822 mile-circumnavigation of Texas offer fresh views of the beauty and diversity of the state’s natural and human landscapes.

More info

Why the Ramones Matter

University of Texas Press

Why the Ramones Matter compellingly makes the case that the Ramones gave us everything; they saved rock and roll, modeled DIY ethics, and addressed our deepest collective traumas, from the personal to the historical.

More info

Why the Beach Boys Matter

University of Texas Press

This is the first book to take an honest look at the themes running through the Beach Boys’ art and career as a whole and to examine where they sit inside our culture and politics—and why they still grab our attention.

More info

Bird on a Blade

University of Texas Press

The legendary musician Rosanne Cash joins acclaimed artist Dan Rizzie to create fifty pairings of lyrics and images that speak to the experiences of love and loss, fear and faith, and the everyday hope that propels our lives.

More info

The Television Code

Regulating the Screen to Safeguard the Industry

University of Texas Press

Revisiting early debates about TV content and censorship from industry and government perspectives, this book recounts the development of the Television Code, the TV counterpart to the Hays Motion Picture Production Code.

More info

The Book of Merlyn

The Conclusion to The Once and Future King

By T.H. White; Introduction by Gregory Maguire; Illustrated by Trevor Stubley
University of Texas Press

Featuring a new foreword by Gregory Maguire, the bestselling author of Wicked, this long-lost conclusion to The Once and Future King was a New York Times bestseller and has sold 150,000 copies.

More info

Some of the Dead Are Still Breathing

Living in the Future

University of Texas Press

The third book in Charles Bowden’s “Unnatural History of the United States” sextet, Some of the Dead Are Still Breathing continues to interrogate humanity’s destructive actions and responsibilities as we move further into the twenty-first century.

More info

Slavery and Utopia

The Wars and Dreams of an Amazonian World Transformer

University of Texas Press

Through the career of a charismatic indigenous leader, this book chronicles the struggles surrounding indigenous slavery in Peruvian Amazonia from the collapse of the rubber economy to the beginnings of mass colonization in the region.

More info

Blues for Cannibals

The Notes from Underground

By Charles Bowden; Introduction by Amy Goodman and Denis Moynihan
University of Texas Press

The second book in Charles Bowden’s “Unnatural History of the United States” sextet, Blues for Cannibals is an elegiac rumination on our hunger for self-consumption and destruction as a species.

More info

Blood Orchid

An Unnatural History of America

University of Texas Press

The first book in Charles Bowden’s “Unnatural History of the United States” sextet, Blood Orchid is a dizzying excavation of the violence and corruption at the roots of American society.

More info

Night Moves

University of Texas Press

The revolutionary culture critic delivers an edgy, exhilarating tribute to her beloved Chicago, recalling the gritty clubs and ramshackle neighborhoods where she found her voice a decade ago. 

More info

Dawoud Bey

Seeing Deeply

University of Texas Press

With images ranging from street photography in Harlem to a commemoration of the 1963 Birmingham church bombing, this volume offers a forty-year career retrospective of the award-winning photographer Dawoud Bey.

More info

Frida Kahlo

An Illustrated Life

By María Hesse; Translated by Achy Obejas
University of Texas Press

Now available in English, this internationally acclaimed graphic novel biography of iconic artist Frida Kahlo recounts her life’s journey in a first-person story illustrated with striking reimaginings of her famous paintings.

More info

Recovering Inequality

Hurricane Katrina, the San Francisco Earthquake of 1906, and the Aftermath of Disaster

University of Texas Press

This comparative case study of the recovery outcomes from two of the most devastating urban catastrophes in American history lays bare the social inequality inherent in racially arranged, capital-based economies.

More info

Homer in Performance

Rhapsodes, Narrators, and Characters

University of Texas Press

Taking a holistic approach to performances of the Iliad and the Odyssey, this multidisciplinary volume examines both the rhapsodes who performed the poems and the narrators and characters within them.

More info

The Vanishing Frame

Latin American Culture and Theory in the Postdictatorial Era

University of Texas Press

Examining the works of writers and artists such as Roberto Bolaño, Fernando Botero, Pablo Larraín, and Alejandro Zambra, this pathfinding book challenges postdictatorial aesthetics by focusing on the concept of aesthetic autonomy as a critique of economic inequality.

More info

The Design of Protest

Choreographing Political Demonstrations in Public Space

University of Texas Press

Presenting case studies from around the world, this book offers the first extensive discussion of the act of protest as a designed event that uses public space to challenge the distance between institutional power.

More info

The Comedy Studies Reader

University of Texas Press

Surveying comedic texts and performers from The Jack Benny Program to Key and Peele, Saturday Night Live, and Stephen Colbert, this classroom-ready anthology offers a first-ever overview of the field of comedy studies.

More info

Texas BBQ, Small Town to Downtown

By Wyatt McSpadden; Introduction by Aaron Franklin
University of Texas Press

A decade after he celebrated traditional, wood-smoked ’cue in Texas BBQ, Wyatt McSpadden captures the new urban BBQ scene epitomized by Franklin Barbecue, as well as small-town favorites such as Snow’s in Lexington.

More info

A Library for the Americas

The Nettie Lee Benson Latin American Collection

University of Texas Press

This splendidly illustrated volume presents the treasures of the Benson Latin American Collection at the University of Texas at Austin—one of the world’s great libraries for the study of Latin America and Latinas/os in the United States.

More info

The Many Cinemas of Michael Curtiz

University of Texas Press

Leading film studies scholars explore the astonishing range of Michael Curtiz, the most prolific director of studio-era Hollywood, whose nearly one hundred films include Casablanca, White Christmas, and Mildred Pierce.

More info

Palestinian Cinema in the Days of Revolution

University of Texas Press

Bringing to light the origins of an important national cinema, this book examines Palestinian filmmaking during the long 1970s, and how it sustained a revolution and continues to inspire in a new century.

More info

Chicana Movidas

New Narratives of Activism and Feminism in the Movement Era

University of Texas Press

This groundbreaking anthology brings together generations of Chicana scholars and activists to offer the first wide-ranging account of women’s organizing, activism, and leadership in the Chicano Movement.

More info
Find what you’re looking for...
Stay Informed

Receive the latest UBC Press news, including events, catalogues, and announcements.


Read past newsletters

Publishers Represented
UBC Press is the Canadian agent for several international publishers. Visit our Publishers Represented page to learn more.