The University of Alabama Press
As the scholarly publishing arm of the university, The University of Alabama Press serves as an agent in the advancement of learning and the dissemination of scholarship. The Press applies the highest standards to all phases of publishing including acquisitions, editorial, production, and marketing.

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.
Showing 581-590 of 2,005 items.

In the Shadow of Hitler

Alabama's Jews, the Second World War, and the Holocaust

University of Alabama Press

How Alabama Jews became aware of and responded to the coming of the Second World War and the Nazi persecution of European Jews.

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Memories of Two Generations

A Yiddish Life in Russia and Texas

By Alexander Z. Gurwitz; Edited by Bryan Edward Stone; Translated by Amram Prero; Introduction by Bryan Edward Stone; Preface by Alexander Z. Gurwitz
University of Alabama Press

The 1935 autobiography of Alexander Ziskind Gurwitz, an Orthodox Jew whose lively recounting of his life in Tsarist Russia and his immigration to San Antonio, Texas, in 1910 captures turbulent changes in early twentieth-century Jewish history

  • Copyright year: 2016
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A Universal Theory of Pottery Production

Irving Rouse, Attributes, Modes, and Ethnography

University of Alabama Press

By an analysis of ceramic production, appendage, and decorative techniques at the Paso del Indio archaeological site in Puerto Rico, Richard A. Krause’s A Universal Theory of Pottery Production offers new insight into a classic theory of pottery manufacture by production steps and stages.

  • Copyright year: 2016
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The Transmutation of Love and Avant-Garde Poetics

University of Alabama Press

The Transmutation of Love and Avant-Garde Poetics is a probing examination of how the writing of sexual love undergoes a radical revision by avant-garde poets in the twentieth and twenty-first centuries. Today, the exploration of love by poets—long a fixture of Western poetic tradition—is thought to be in decline, with love itself understood to be a mere ideological overlay for the more “real” entities of physical sex and desire.

  • Copyright year: 2016
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Fanning the Spark

A Memoir

University of Alabama Press

Fanning the Spark is the story of Mary Ward Brown's life as a writer—her upbringing in rural Alabama; the joys of college, marriage, and motherhood; the sorrows of becoming a widow; and a lifelong devotion to writing, writers, and literature, and the company of those who shared those loves, nurturing and feeding her interior life in the face of many challenges, losses, and obstacles, both emotional and material.

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Creating Citizens

Liberal Arts, Civic Engagement, and the Land-Grant Tradition

Edited by Brigitta R. Brunner; Introduction by Brigitta R. Brunner
University of Alabama Press

Creating Citizens is a collection of essays about Community and Civic Engagement (CCE) learning at land-grant universities. They demonstrate the surprising and robust ways such programs bolster and enhance the mission of land-grant institutions.

  • Copyright year: 2016
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Canons by Consensus

Critical Trends and American Literature Anthologies

By Joseph Csicsila; Foreword by Tom Quirk
University of Alabama Press

The first systematic analysis of American literature textbooks used by college instructors in the last century

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Archaeopoetics

Word, Image, History

University of Alabama Press

Explores poetry as historical investigation, examining works by five contemporary poets whose creations represent new, materially emphatic methods of engaging with the past and producing new kinds of historical knowledge
 

  • Copyright year: 2016
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Philip Pendleton Barbour in Jacksonian America

An Old Republican in King Andrew’s Court

University of Alabama Press

Philip Pendleton Barbour in Jacksonian America is the definitive biography of a Virginia legislator and jurist whose life and career mirror the transformational decades of US history between the War of 1812 and the end of the Mexican American War in 1848.

  • Copyright year: 2016
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Opposing the Second Corps at Antietam

The Fight for the Confederate Left and Center on America's Bloodiest Day

University of Alabama Press

Offers a definitive guide to the Confederate army’s primary engagements at the epic Battle of Antietam

  • Copyright year: 2016
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UBC Press is the Canadian agent for several international publishers. Visit our Publishers Represented page to learn more.