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.
Southern Exposure
Making the South Safe for Democracy
Using thorough and stark statistics, Kennedy describes a South emerging from World War II, coming to grips with the racism and feudalism that had held it back for generations. He includes an all-out Who’s Who, based on his own undercover investigations, of the "hate-mongers, race-racketeers, and terrorists who swore that apartheid must go on forever." The first paperback edition brings to a new generation of readers Kennedy’s searing profile of Dixie before the civil rights movement.
Remaining Chickasaw in Indian Territory, 1830s-1907
Remaining Chickasaw in Indian Territory, 1830s-1907 deals with the challenges the Chickasaw people had from attacking Texans and Plains Indians, the tribe’s ex-slaves, the influence on the tribe of intermarried white men, and the presence of illegal aliens (U.S. citizens) in their territory. By focusing on the tribal and U.S. government policy conflicts, as well as longstanding attempts of the Chickasaw people to remain culturally unique, St. Jean reveals the successes and failures of the Chickasaw in attaining and maintaining sovereignty as a separate and distinct Chickasaw Nation.
- Copyright year: 2011
The Swift Creek Gift
Vessel Exchange on the Atlantic Coast
Modern Occult Rhetoric
Mass Media and the Drama of Secrecy in the Twentieth Century
A broadly interdisciplinary study of the pervasive secrecy in America cultural, political, and religious discourse.
Mississippian Polity and Politics on the Gulf Coastal Plain
A View from the Pearl River, Mississippi
Using research at the Pevey (22Lw510) and Lowe-Steen (22Lw511) mound sites on the Pearl River in Lawrence County, Mississippi, this book explores the social and political mechanisms by which these polities may have interacted with each other and the geographic limit to the effects of inter-polity competition.
- Copyright year: 2011
Anna's Shtetl
A rare view of a childhood in a European ghetto
- Copyright year: 2007
Archaeologists as Activists
Can Archaeologists Change the World?
Examines the various ways in which archaeologists can and do use their research to forge a partnership with the past and guide the ongoing dialogue between the archaeological record and various contemporary stakeholders
- Copyright year: 2011
Beleaguered Poets and Leftist Critics
Stevens, Cummings, Frost, and Williams in the 1930s
Different as they were as poets, Wallace Stevens, E. E. Cummings, Robert Frost, and Williams Carlos Williams grappled with the highly charged literary politics of the 1930s in comparable ways. All four poets saw their reputations critically challenged in these years and felt compelled to respond to the new politics, literary and national, in distinct ways, ranging from rejection to involvement. Beleaguered Poets and Leftist Critics closely examines the dynamics of their responses.
- Copyright year: 2011
Radical Affections
Essays on the Poetics of Outside
A study of six poets central to the New American poetry—Charles Olson, Robert Creeley, Robert Duncan, Jack Spicer, Robin Blaser, and Susan Howe—with an eye both toward challenging the theoretical lenses through which they have been viewed and to opening up this counter tradition to contemporary practice
An Insight into an Insane Asylum
In 1881, Joseph Camp, an elderly and self-trained Methodist minister from Talladega County, Alabama, was brought by his family to Bryce Hospital, an insane asylum in Tuscaloosa, where he remained for over five months. This book is an account of his stay and provides a rare glimpse of 19th century mental health care from a patient's viewpoint.
- Copyright year: 2011
American Indians and the Market Economy, 1775-1850
- Copyright year: 2011
Beyond the Blockade
New Currents in Cuban Archaeology
Builds on dialogues opened in recent years between Cuban archaeologists, whose work has long been carried out behind closed doors, and their international colleagues
- Copyright year: 2011
Twilight of a Golden Age
Selected Poems of Abraham Ibn Ezra
The House of My Sojourn
Rhetoric, Women, and the Question of Authority
Envisions the relationship between women and rhetoric as a house: a structure erected in ancient Greece by men that, historically, has made room for women but has also denied them the authority and agency to speak from within
- Copyright year: 2010
Once They Had a Country
Two Teenage Refugees in the Second World War
Once They Had a Country conveys well what it was like to establish a new life in a foreign country--over and over again and in constant fear for one's life. The book draws from a remarkable set of primary source materials, including letters, telegrams, and police records to relate the story of two teenage refugees during World War II.
- Copyright year: 2010
Paganism - Christianity - Judaism
A Confession of Faith
Now remembered primarily as Franz Kafta's friend and literary executor, Max Brod was an accomplishered thinker and writer in his own right. In this volume, he considers the nature and differences between Judaism and Christianity, addressing some of the most perplexing questions at the heart of human existence.
Theatre History Studies 2010, Vol. 30
To mark the thirtieth anniversary of the Theatre History Studies journal, editor Rhona Justice-Malloy and the Mid-America Theatre Conference have collected a special-themed volume covering the past and present of African and African American theatre.
- Copyright year: 2010
Pox, Empire, Shackles, and Hides
The Townsend Site, 1670-1715
Theatre Symposium, Vol. 18
The Prop's The Thing: Stage Properties Reconsidered
Stage properties are an often-ignored aspect of theatrical productions, in part because their usage is meant to be seamlessly integrated into the performance instead of a focal point for the audience. The contributors illuminate many aspects of this largely ignored yet crucial part of the theatre.
- Copyright year: 2010
Inside the Eagle's Head
An American Indian College
The Southwestern Indian Polytechnic Institute (SIPI) is a self-described National American Indian Community College in Albuquerque, New Mexico that is operated by the Bureau of Indian Affairs, an agency of the U.S. government that has overseen and managed the relationship between the government and American Indian tribes. This book looks at the Institute in detail.
- Copyright year: 2010
The Size of the Universe
The author's first book-length work of fiction that is as familiar as childhook yet beguilingly surreal. This book conjures an elegant labyrinth of time, space, and memory, in which a wavering self, a self on the verge of becoming nothing, seeks a safe haven from the throes of near-religious ecstasy.
- Copyright year: 2010
Calendar of Regrets
A wildly inventive and visually rich collage of twelve interconnected narratives, one for each month of the year, all pertaining to notions of travel--through time, space, narrative, and death
- Copyright year: 2010
Translating Modernism
Fitzgerald and Hemingway
In Translating Modernism Ronald Berman continues his career-long study of the ways that intellectual and philosophical ideas informed and transformed the work of America’s major modernist writers.
Philip Henry Gosse
Science and Art in Letters from Alabama and Entomologia Alabamensis
Philip Henry Gosse's detailed watercolors of Alabama's native insects and plants represent a landmark in the annals of American natural history. Offered for the first time are the complete full-color illustrations from Gosse's Entomologia Alabamensis, along with a biographical essay placing Gosse's work in the context of his long and fruitful life.
- Copyright year: 2010
Fascinating Foods from the Deep South
Favorite Recipes from the University Club of Tuscaloosa, Alabama
This cookbook contains more than 250 mouth-watering recipes from the Old South and prepared at the University Club in Tuscaloosa, Alabama. Cookbook collectors and happy cooks everywhere will welcome this popular cookbook that preserves easy recipes.
- Copyright year: 2010
Museum of the Weird
A stunning collection of stories that reveal wondrous play and surreal humor
- Copyright year: 2010
The Crimson Tide
The Official Illustrated History of Alabama Football, National Championship Edition
The book to settle all bets! A lively illustrated history of the University of Alabama football teams that have dominated college football and ranked consistently among the best in the nation and now with 13 national championships to its credit. This updated National Championship Edition contains two new chapters to cover the dark days at the beginning of the 21st century and the dawn of the Nick Saban era.
- Copyright year: 2010
Creekside
An Archaeological Novel
Creekside takes two partially interwoven story lines and linkes artifact and place, ancestors and descendants, the present and the past, and inspires the reader to explore the personal connections between them all in fresh and vital ways.
- Copyright year: 2010
Baseball and Rhetorics of Purity
The National Pastime and American Identity During the War on Terror
An investigation into the culture and mythology of baseball, a study of its limits and failures, and an invitation to remake the game in a more democratic way
- Copyright year: 2010
Recollections of War Times
By An Old Veteran while under Stonewall Jackson and Lieutenant General James Longstreet
Recollections of War Times is a dramatically improved edition of William A. “Gus” McClendon’s memoir of his service in the 15th Alabama Infantry.
- Copyright year: 2010
Nature Journal
An innovative presentation of the best columns and photographs derived from Davenport’s popular column of the same title in Alabama Heritage magazine. Readers of the magazine have come to relish his artful and often witty descriptions of common species encountered in the Alabama outdoors. The book is designed to be much more than a mere collection of entertaining essays; it is also an educational tool—a means of instructing and encouraging readers in the art of keeping a nature journal for themselves.
- Copyright year: 2010
Speak Truth to Power
The Story of Charles Patrick, a Civil Rights Pioneer
Speak Truth to Power tells the story of Charles Patrick’s quest for justice in segregated Alabama on the eve of the Civil Rights movement and represents a telling instance of the growing determination of African Americans to be treated fairly, part of the broadening and deepening stream of resolve that led to the widespread activism of the Civil Rights movement.
- Copyright year: 2010
Places of Public Memory
The Rhetoric of Museums and Memorials
- Copyright year: 2010
Scientific Characters
Rhetoric, Politics, and Trust in Breast Cancer Research
- Copyright year: 2010
Taming Alabama
Lawyers and Reformers, 1804-1929
Taming Alabama focuses on persons and groups who sought to bring about reforms in the political, legal, and social worlds of Alabama.
- Copyright year: 2010
Rethinking Puerto Rican Precolonial History
Iron and Steel
A Driving Guide to the Birmingham Area Industrial Heritage
This guidebook of historic iron-production sites is designed to give the reader a factual and illuminating look at the people and events that shaped Birmingham into one of America’s leading steel centers. Heavily illustrated in color and historical black-and-white photographs, it can be used while visiting parks or read as a coherent volume before or after a visit.
- Copyright year: 2010
The Creek War of 1813 and 1814
This standard account of one of the most controversial wars in which Americans have fought is again available, with introductory materials and a bibliography revised to reflect the advances in scholarship since the 1969 edition.
- Copyright year: 1995
Paths to a Middle Ground
The Diplomacy of Natchez, Boukfouka, Nogales, and San Fernando de las Barrancas, 1791-1795
Charles Weeks explores the diplomacy of Spanish colonial officials in New Orleans and Natchez in order to establish posts on the Mississippi River and Tombigbee rivers in the early 1790s.
Fanatical Schemes
Proslavery Rhetoric and the Tragedy of Consensus
Fanatical Schemes is a study of proslavery rhetoric in the 1830s.
Sweet Cane
The Architecture of the Sugar Works of East Florida
Considering Maus
Approaches to Art Spiegelman's "Survivor's Tale" of the Holocaust
The first collection of critical essays on Maus, the searing account of one Holocaust survivor's experiences rendered in comic book form.
- Copyright year: 2007
Albert Murray and the Aesthetic Imagination of a Nation
Origins of the Tainan Culture, West Indies
When originally published in German in 1924, this volume was hailed as the first modern, comprehensive archaeological overview of an emerging area of the world, now known as the Caribbean islands. Sven Loven decided to update and reissue the work in English, which he thought to be the future international language of scholarship. This work is a classic, with enduring interpretations, broad geographic range, and an eager audience.
- Copyright year: 2010
At the Moon's Inn
- Copyright year: 2009
The Architectural Legacy of Wallace A. Rayfield
Pioneer Black Architect of Birmingham, Alabama
- Copyright year: 2010
Mound Excavations at Moundville
Architecture, Elites and Social Order
This work is a state-of-the-art, data-rich study of excavations undertaken at the Moundville site in west central Alabama, one of the largest and most complex of the mound sites of pre-contact North America.
- Copyright year: 2010
Populism to Progressivism In Alabama
“In this excellent study of Alabama politics, Hackney deftly analyzes the leadership, following, and essential character of Populism and Progressivism during the period from 1890 to 1910.” – Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science
- Copyright year: 2010
Personality and the Cultural Construction of Society
Pyschological anthropology is a vital area of contemporary social science, and one of the field's most important and innovative thinkers is Melford E. Spiro. This volume brings together sixteen essays that review Spiro's theoretical insights and extend them into new areas. The essays center on several general problems: In what ways is it meaningful to speak of a social act as having "functions"? What elements and processes of human personality are universal, and why? What is the relationship between religion and personality? Why? What are the pyschological underpinnings of social manipulation?
- Copyright year: 1990
Air Power in War
The architect of the successful air strategy which led to Allied victory
- Copyright year: 2010