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.
Island Lives
Historical Archaeologies of the Caribbean
This comprehensive study of the historical archaeology of the Caribbean provides sociopolitical context for the ongoing development of national identities; points to the future by suggesting different trajectories that historical archaeology and its practitioners may take in the Caribbean arena; and elucidates the problems and issues faced worldwide by researchers working in colonial and post-colonial societies.
- Copyright year: 2001
Black, White, and Huckleberry Finn
Re-imagining the American Dream
- Copyright year: 2001
The Untidy Pilgrim
- Copyright year: 2001
Setting the Agenda for American Archaeology
The National Research Council Archaeological Conferences of 1929, 1932, and 1935
This collection elucidates the key role played by the National Research Council seminars, reports, and pamphlets in setting an agenda that has guided American archaeology in the 20th century.
- Copyright year: 2001
Dead Towns of Alabama
This easy-to-use reference work documents the many long-vanished towns, forts, settlements, and former state capitals that were once thriving communities of Alabama.
- Copyright year: 2001
The Blue Guide to Indiana
- Copyright year: 2001
Yiddish & English
The Story of Yiddish in America
This is the only book to seriously treat the intriguing linguistic and cultural phenomenon of the intimate contact between Yiddish and English over the past 120 years.
- Copyright year: 2001
Theatre Symposium, Vol. 9
Theatre and Politics in the Twentieth Century
Cotton City
Urban Development in Antebellum Mobile
Amos’s study delineates the basis for Mobile’s growth and the ways in which residents and their government promoted growth and adapted to it.
- Copyright year: 2001
The One-Gallused Rebellion
Agrarianism in Alabama, 1865-1896
This key study in the history of Alabama's agrarian movement of the late 19th century will be welcomed anew by agricultural, political, labor, and southern historians.
- Copyright year: 2001
Hitting A Straight Lick with a Crooked Stick
Race and Gender in the Work of Zora Neale Hurston
- Copyright year: 2001
Ulster and North America
Transatlantic Perspectives on the Scotch Irish
- Copyright year: 2001
The Cost of Courage
The Journey of an American Congressman
This deeply moving story chronicles the tenacity and vision that carried Carl Elliott from the hills of northwest Alabama to eight distinguished terms in the United States House of Representatives.
Three Voyages
This translation of an eyewitness account by a major participant offers valuable information about all three attempts to establish a French colony on the south Atlantic coast of North America.
- Copyright year: 2001
Laudonniere & Fort Caroline
History and Documents
This classic historical resource remains the most complete work on the establishment of Fort Caroline, which heralded the start of permanent settlement by Europeans in North America. America's history was shaped in part by the clash of cultures that took place in the southeastern United States in the 1560s. Indians, French, and Spaniards vied to profit from European attempts to colonize the land Juan Ponce de Leon had named La Florida.
- Copyright year: 2001
Ballad of Little River
A Tale of Race and Unrest in the Rural South
- Copyright year: 2001
Aunt Rachel's Fur
- Copyright year: 2001
The Southern and Central Alabama Expeditions of Clarence Bloomfield Moore
Covering 19 years of excavations, this volume provides an invaluable collection of Moore's pioneering archaeological investigations along Alabama's waterways.
- Copyright year: 2001
With Fiddle and Well-Rosined Bow
A History of Old-Time Fiddling In Alabama
Relying on extensive archival research and on sixty interviews with
fiddlers and their families and friends, Cauthen tells the rich, full story
of old-time fiddling in Alabama.
- Copyright year: 2001
Source Material for the Social and Ceremonial Life of the Choctaw Indians
Long considered the undisputed authority on the Indians of the southern United States, anthropologist John Swanton published this history as the Smithsonian Institution's Bureau of American Ethnology (BAE) Bulletin 103 in 1931. Swanton's descriptions are drawn from earlier records—including those of DuPratz and Romans—and from Choctaw informants. His long association with the Choctaws is evident in the thorough detailing of their customs and way of life and in his sensitivity to the presentation of their native culture.
- Copyright year: 2001
Cudjo's Cave
Cudjo’s Cave chronicles the brutalities and fears faced by unionists, loyal to Abraham Lincoln and the federal cause, living in secessionist states politically aligned with the Confederacy.
- Copyright year: 2001
Ninety Degrees in the Shade
This second reprint edition of a classic work on southern culture will allow a new generation of readers to enjoy Cason's observant, graceful writing.
- Copyright year: 2001
Classics of Civil War Fiction
- Copyright year: 2001
Sun Circles and Human Hands
The Southeastern Indians Art and Industries
From utilitarian arrowheads to beautiful stone effigy pipes to ornately-carved shell disks, the photographs and drawings in Sun Circles and Human Hands present the archaeological record of the art and native crafts of the prehistoric southeastern Indians, painstakingly compiled in the 1950s by two sisters who traveled the eastern United States interviewing archaeologists and collectors and visiting the major repositories. Although research over the last 50 years has disproven many of the early theories reported in the text—which were not the editors' theories but those of the archaeologists of the day—the excellent illustrations of objects no longer available for examination have more than validated the lasting worth of this popular book.
- Copyright year: 2001
Method and Theory in American Archaeology
- Copyright year: 2001
Everybody's Autonomy
Connective Reading and Collective Identity
Everybody's Autonomy is about reading and identity. Experimental texts empower the reader by encouraging self-governing approaches to reading and by placing the reader on equal footing with the author.
- Copyright year: 2001
Faces of Freedom Summer
- Copyright year: 2001
Stars Fell on Alabama
- Copyright year: 2000
Last Rites for the Tipu Maya
Genetic Structuring in a Colonial Cemetery
Last Rites for the Tipu Maya is a groundbreaking study that uncovers the history of the Tipu Maya of Belize and their subsequent contact with the Spanish conquistadores and missionaries.
- Copyright year: 2000
The Fast Red Road
A Plainsong
The Fast Red Road—A Plainsong is a novel which plunders, in a gleeful, two-fisted fashion, the myth and pop-culture surrounding the American Indian.
- Copyright year: 2000
Outside Agitator
Jon Daniels and the Civil Rights Movement in Alabama
Winner of the 1993 Lillian Smith Book Award, sponsored by the Southern Regional Council, Outside Agitator tells the dramatic, largely forgotten story behind the 1965 killing of civil rights worker Jon Daniels in Lowndes County, Alabama, detailing the lives of the killer and the victim.
- Copyright year: 2000
Andersonville Violets
A Story of Northern and Southern Life
- Copyright year: 2000
Archaeology of Southern Urban Landscapes
- Copyright year: 2000
The Great Gatsby and Fitzgerald's World of Ideas
Berman examines the intellectual and cultural milieu in which The
Great Gatsby was created--and challenges accepted interpretations of
Fitzgerald's greatest novel.
- Copyright year: 2000
Addressing Postmodernity
Kenneth Burke, Rhetoric, and a Theory of Social Change
Reveals the full range of Kenneth Burke's contribution to the possibility of social change
- Copyright year: 2000
Border Crossings
Irish Women Writers and National Identities
- Copyright year: 2000
Struggle for the Gulf Borderlands
The Creek War and the Battle of New Orleans, 1812-1815
- Copyright year: 2000
One Day in the Life of a Born Again Loser and Other Stories
Renowned Alabama writer Helen Norris returns with her first short-story collection in seven years, a collection filled with the delightful and diverse characters her fans have grown to love.
- Copyright year: 2000
Extraordinary Measures
Afrocentric Modernism and 20th-Century American Poetry
This broad overview by an established poet and cultural critic reveals the rich tapestry of African American poetry as it has emerged over the past century.
- Copyright year: 2000
The Wilderness
- Copyright year: 2000