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.
Fitter, Happier
The Eugenic Strain in Twentieth-Century Cancer Rhetoric
Dear Incomprehension
On American Speculative Fiction
Unsettling Brazil
Urban Indigenous and Black Peoples' Resistances to Dependent Settler Capitalism
Analyzes favela, quilombola, and indigenous communities’ responses to settler colonialism in urban Brazil. Based on ethnographic research and her experiences growing up in Brazil, the author tells the stories of communities in Rio de Janeiro, São Paulo, and Belo Horizonte
Theatre History Studies 2023, Vol. 42
- Copyright year: 2024
Samson Raphael Hirsch's Religious Universalism and the German-Jewish Quest for Emancipation
An account of how Rabbi Samson Raphael Hirsch promulgated an inclusive vision of Judaism in the context of advancing the civic equality of German Jews in the nineteenth century
Apalachicola Valley Archaeology, Volume 1
Prehistory through the Middle Woodland Period
The definitive archaeological record and what is known or speculated about the ancient Apalachicola and lower Chattahoochee Valley region of northwest Florida, southeast Alabama, and southwest Georgia
- Copyright year: 2024
Tannery Bay
A Novel
- Copyright year: 2024
American Examples
New Conversations about Religion, Volume Three
- Copyright year: 2024
Odyssey of a Wandering Mind
The Strange Tale of Sara Mayfield, Author
A carefully rendered portrait of a brilliant but troubled daughter of the Old South who struggled against the conventions of gender, class, family, and ultimately of sanity, yet survived to define a creative life of her own
- Copyright year: 2024
The Houseboat Veronica
A Novel
A mythopoetic journey to the edge of the world and to the edges of reason, horror, and beauty with a witch and her young ward.