Founded in 1963, the University of Massachusetts Press publishes scholarship, literature, and books for general readers that reflect the quality and diversity of intellectual life on UMass campuses, in their region, and around the world. UMass Press has sold more than 2,000,000 volumes since its inception, and currently has over 1,400 titles in print.
In recent years, the Press has focused primarily on books in the field of American studies broadly defined—books that explore the history, politics, literature, culture, and environment of the United States—as well as works with a transnational perspective. In addition to publishing works of scholarship, the Press produces books of more general interest for a wider readership and launched its regional trade imprint, Bright Leaf in 2017.
"Uncle Tom's Cabin" and the Reading Revolution
Race, Literacy, Childhood, and Fiction, 1851-1911
- Copyright year: 2011
Who Deserves to Die?
Constructing the Executable Subject
- Copyright year: 2011
What Adolescents Ought to Know
Sexual Health Texts in Early Twentieth-Century America
- Copyright year: 2011
Making War and Minting Christians
Masculinity, Religion, and Colonialism in Early New England
- Copyright year: 2011
The Law of Miracles
And Other Stories
- Copyright year: 2011
Literary Journalism across the Globe
Journalistic Traditions and Transnational Influences
- Copyright year: 2011
Northern Hospitality
Cooking by the Book in New England
- Copyright year: 2011
The Battle for the Mind
War and Peace in the Era of Mass Communication
- Copyright year: 2011
Lost Time
On Remembering and Forgetting in Late Modern Culture
- Copyright year: 2009
Sisters in the Faith
Shaker Women and Equality of the Sexes
- Copyright year: 2011
Reading Emily Dickinson's Letters
Critical Essays
- Copyright year: 2011