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.
Georgia Civil War Manuscript Collections
An Annotated Bibliography
This book provides historians and genealogists with a one-stop guide to every Civil War–related manuscript collection stored in Georgia’s many repositories. With this guide in hand, researchers will no longer spend countless hours pouring through online catalogs, emailing archivists, and wondering if they have exhausted every lead in their pursuit of firsthand information about the war and the experiences of those who lived through and were impacted by it.
- Copyright year: 2011
Tried Men and True, or Union Life in Dixie
- Copyright year: 2011
José de Bustamante and Central American Independence
Colonial Administration in an Age of Imperial Crisis
Building a Nation
Chickasaw Museums and the Construction of History and Heritage
Using museum and heritage sites as places to define itself as a coherent and legitimate contemporary Indian nation, the Chickasaw Nation struggles to remain accurate and yet apace with the evolving nature of museums
- Copyright year: 2011
Reborn in America
French Exiles and Refugees in the United States and the Vine and Olive Adventure, 1815-1865
- Copyright year: 2011
Theatre Symposium, Vol. 19
Theatre and Film
- Copyright year: 2011
Theatre History Studies 2011, Vol. 31
- Copyright year: 2011
The Poisoned Chalice
Eucharistic Grape Juice and Common-Sense Realism in Victorian Methodism
Examines the introduction of grape juice into the celebration of Holy Communion in the late 19th century Methodist Episcopal Church and reveals how a 1,800-year-old practice of using fermented communion wine became theologically incomprehensible in a mere forty years
Islands at the Crossroads
Migration, Seafaring, and Interaction in the Caribbean
The contributors to Islands at the Crossroads include scholars from the Caribbean, the United States, and Europe who look beyond cultural boundaries and colonial frontiers to explore the complex and layered ways in which both distant and more intimate sociocultural, political, and economic interactions have shaped Caribbean societies from seven thousand years ago to recent times.
- Copyright year: 2011
What Are Stem Cells?
Definitions at the Intersection of Science and Politics
- Copyright year: 2011
Money and Modernity
Pound, Williams, and the Spirit of Jefferson
Protecting Heritage in the Caribbean
This volume addresses the problem of how Caribbean nations deal with the challenges of protecting their cultural heritages or patrimonies within the context of pressing economic development concerns.
- Copyright year: 2011
Imagining Legality
Where Law Meets Popular Culture
- Copyright year: 2011
The Voice of the River
A Novel
- Copyright year: 2011
W. C. Handy
The Life and Times of the Man Who Made the Blues
- Copyright year: 2011
As If a Bird Flew By Me
A Novel
- Copyright year: 2011
Global Memoryscapes
Contesting Remembrance in a Transnational Age
- Copyright year: 2011
Thirteen Loops
Race, Violence, and the Last Lynching in America
- Copyright year: 2011
Four for a Quarter
Fictions
- Copyright year: 2011
Keeping the Faith
Ordinary People, Extraordinary Lives
- Copyright year: 2011
Sold Down the River
Slavery in the Lower Chattahoochee Valley of Alabama and Georgia
- Copyright year: 2011
The Kings of Casino Park
Black Baseball in the Lost Season of 1932
Aiello addresses long-held misunderstandings and misinterpretations of the Louisiana Monarchs black baseball team’s 1932 season. He tells the almost-unknown story of the team—its time, its fortunes, its hometown—and positions black baseball in the context of American racial discrimination. He illuminates the culture-changing power of a baseball team and the importance of sport in cultural and social history.
- Copyright year: 2011
For the Love of Alabama
Journalism by Ron Casey and Bailey Thomson
- Copyright year: 2011
Year of the Pig
- Copyright year: 2011
A Soldier's Story of His Regiment (61st Georgia)
And Incidentally of the Lawton-Gordon-Evans Brigade Army of Northern Virginia
- Copyright year: 2011
Stumbling Its Way through Mexico
The Early Years of the Communist International
- Copyright year: 2011
The Illustrated Version of Things
A young woman, raised in foster homes, juvenile halls, and a mental hospital, on a quest to reunite her disparate family and track down her missing mother.
- Copyright year: 2009
Out of Many, One People
The Historical Archaeology of Colonial Jamaica
- Copyright year: 2011
Gaming Matters
Art, Science, Magic, and the Computer Game Medium
- Copyright year: 2011
Native American Legends of the Southeast
Tales from the Natchez, Caddo, Biloxi, Chickasaw, and Other Nations
- Copyright year: 2011
The Two Worlds of William March
The emphasis in The Two Worlds of William March is on the literary career, and we get a fairly full picture of a hardworking, oversensitive, compassionate bachelor, who suffered a tragic breakdown late in life . . . [and] whose best long works, Company K and The Looking-Glass, as well as March himself are almost forgotten. . . . Simmonds’s comprehensive, scholarly, and sympathetic study may redress this unwarranted neglect.” —CHOICE
99 Fables
- Copyright year: 2011
Grounded Vision
New Agrarianism and the Academy
In Grounded Vision, William Major puts contemporary agrarian thinking into a conciliatory and productive dialogue with academic criticism. He argues that the lack of participation in academic discussions means a loss to both agrarians and academics, since agrarian thought can enrich other ongoing discussions on topics such as ecocriticism, postmodernism, feminism, work studies, and politics—especially in light of the recent upsurge in grassroots cultural and environmental activities critical of modernity, such as the sustainable agriculture and slow food movements.
- Copyright year: 2011
The Most They Ever Had
This is a mill story—not of bricks, steel, and cotton, but of the people who suffered it to live.
- Copyright year: 2011
Motorcycling Alabama
50 Ride Loops through the Heart of Dixie
- Copyright year: 2011
Memoirs of the Civil War
Between the Northern and Southern Sections of the United States of America 1861 to 1865
- Copyright year: 2011
Acorns and Bitter Roots
Starch Grain Research in the Prehistoric Eastern Woodlands
Starch grain analysis in the temperate climates of eastern North America using the Delaware River Watershed as a case study for furthering scholarly understanding of the relationship between native people and their biophysical environment in the Woodland Period
- Copyright year: 2011
The Naval Air War in Korea
“In The Naval Air War in Korea, Dr. Hallion has captured the fact, feel- ing, and fancy of a very important conflict in aviation history, in- cluding the highly significant facets of the transition from piston to jet-propelled combat aircraft.”—Norman Polmar, author of Naval Institute Guide to the Ships and Aircraft of the U.S. Fleet, 18th Edition
Trial Balance
The Collected Short Stories of William March
The Collected Short Stories of William March
- Copyright year: 2011
Enacting History
- Copyright year: 2011
The Klan Unmasked
With a New Introduction by David Pilgrim and a New Author's Note
Stetson Kennedy’s infiltration and exposure of the KKK.
Sloss Furnaces and the Rise of the Birmingham District
An Industrial Epic
Sloss Furnaces resonates with the class of competition and the frenetic energy with which southerners joined other Americans in a rush to transform a continent after a fratricidal drive for independence had failed. The sweeping narrative that Lewis has produced amply justifies its subtitle, An Industrial Epic.
- Copyright year: 1994
Jim Crow Guide to the U.S.A.
The Laws, Customs and Etiquette Governing the Conduct of Nonwhites and Other Minorities as Second-Class Citizens
Jim Crow Guide documents the system of legally imposed American apartheid that prevailed during what Stetson Kennedy calls "the long century from Emancipation to the Overcoming." The mock guidebook covers every area of activity where the tentacles of Jim Crow reached. From the texts of state statutes, municipal ordinances, federal regulations, and judicial rulings, Kennedy exhumes the legalistic skeleton of Jim Crow in a work of permanent value for scholars and of exceptional appeal for general readers.
The Complete Tales of Lucy Gold
- Copyright year: 2011
From That Terrible Field
Civil War Letters of James M. Williams, 21st Alabama Infantry Volunteers
“The well-written and candid letters of a reasonably articulate Southern officer, who paints a lucid picture of everyday life in the Confederate army in a little-known theater… Williams’s letters, personally written and shot through with his sharp sense of humor and folksy artwork, provide an excellent account of a long neglected theater of the American Civil War.” – Western Pennsylvania History
The Story of Coal and Iron in Alabama
This book is the principal authority for the general treatment of the history of coal, and of iron and steel, in Alabama.
The Pecan Orchard
Journey of a Sharecropper's Daughter
- Copyright year: 2011
Liberalism and the Culture of Security
The Nineteenth-Century Rhetoric of Reform
Figures of protection and security are everywhere in American public discourse, from the protection of privacy or civil liberties to the protection of marriage or the unborn, and from social security to homeland security. Liberalism and the Culture of Security traces a crucial paradox in historical and contemporary notions of citizenship: in a liberal democratic culture that imagines its citizens as self-reliant, autonomous, and inviolable, the truth is that claims for citizenship—particularly for marginalized groups such as women and slaves—have just as often been made in the name of vulnerability and helplessness.
- Copyright year: 2011
Arthouse
A Novel
- Copyright year: 2011
Father Flashes
- Copyright year: 2011