UAP has won numerous awards for its publications over the years and has developed a solid list of titles in archaeology, public administration, and several areas of literature and history. With a staff of 17, the Press publishes between 80 to 85 books a year and has a backlist of approximately 1,800 titles in print.
Diamonds in the Rough
A History of Alabama's Cahaba Coal Field
- Copyright year: 2013
The Tallons
- Copyright year: 1964
The Looking-Glass
- Copyright year: 1943
The House by the Side of the Road
The Selma Civil Rights Movement
Come in at the Door
- Copyright year: 1934
Southern Sanctuary
A Naturalist's Walk through the Seasons
- Copyright year: 2015
American Literary Minimalism
- Copyright year: 2015
Sherman's Mississippi Campaign
- Copyright year: 2006
Here and There in Mexico
The Travel Writings of Mary Ashley Townsend
Mary Ashley Townsend was a novelist, newspaper columnist, and poet laureate of New Orleans who made several trips to Mexico with her daughter Cora during the last two decades of the 19th century. She collected her impressions of many aspects of life in that country—flora, fauna, architecture, people at work and play, fashion, society, food—and wrote about them during a time when few women engaged in solo travel, much less the pursuit of travel writing. Here and There in Mexico will make new contribution to the field of Latin American studies and to the travel literature genre, both as a primary source for historians and as a well-written account of a southern woman’s impressions of Mexico during a crucial period in that country’s development.
Tender Is the Night and F. Scott Fitzgerald's Sentimental Identities
- Copyright year: 2015
Tenahaha and the Wari State
A View of the Middle Horizon from the Cotahuasi Valley
- Copyright year: 2015
Reading Network Fiction
David Ciccoricco establishes the category of "network fiction" as distinguishable from other forms of hypertext and cybertext: network fictions are narrative texts in digitally networked environments that make use of hypertext technology in order to create emergent and recombinant narratives.
- Copyright year: 2007
Other Letters to Milena / Otras cartas a Milena
- Copyright year: 2014
Henry Darwin Rogers, 1808–1866
American Geologist
Henry Darwin Rogers was one of the first professional geologists in the United States. He directed two of the earliest state geological surveys--New Jersey and Pennsylvania--in the mid-1830s. His major interest was Pennsylvania, with its Appalachian Mountains, which Rogers saw as great folds of sedimentary rock. He belived that an interpretation of these folds would lead to an understanding of the dynamic processes that had shaped the earth. From Rogers' efforts to explain these Pennsylvania folds came the first uniquely American theory of mountain elevation, a theory that Rogers personally considered his most significant achievement.
Community over Chaos
An Ecological Perspective on Communication Ethics
As James A. Mackin, Jr., shows, both modernism and postmodernism have undermined the traditional foundations for ethics. Using an ecological model, however, Community over Chaos develops a common ground for ethical judgments about communication, thus countering the current theoretical climate of pessimistic cynicism toward the very possibility of ethics.
Theatre History Studies 2014, Vol. 33
Theatres of War
- Copyright year: 2014
Gertrude Stein and the Reinvention of Rhetoric
- Copyright year: 2014
Winds of Will
Emily Dickinson and the Sovereignty of Democratic Thought
United States–Latin American Relations, 1850–1903
Establishing a Relationship
United States–Latin American Relations, 1850–1903 is a collection of essays that provide an in-depth analysis of the developing relationship between the Americas during the critical period from the Mexican War to the Panama Canal treaty of 1903.
- Copyright year: 1999
Recursive Desire
Rereading Epic Tradition
Recursive Desire rereads the epic tradition and specific epic poems in ways that challenge traditional notions of the genre and highlights its vital, shifting, polyvocal array (and disarray) of textual forces.
- Copyright year: 1997