Established in 1929, the University of New Mexico Press publishes creative works and scholarship in several disciplines, including anthropology, archaeology, indigenous studies, Native studies, Latin American studies, art, architecture, and the history, literature, ecology, and cultures of the American West. UNM Press is the largest publisher in New Mexico and seeks to represent the culture, history, and stories of the Southwest.
Black Mexico
Race and Society from Colonial to Modern Times
This edited volume compiles the most recent research on a pivotal topic in Latin American history--Afro-Mexican experiences from pre-conquest to the modern period.
- Copyright year: 2009
Aftershocks
Earthquakes and Popular Politics in Latin America
In using natural disasters as a way to study societal and especially political change, the essays in this volume illustrate the immediate as well as the long term consequences of destruction.
- Copyright year: 2009
Mimbres Archaeology at the NAN Ranch Ruin
Following two decades of excavations and research at the NAN Ranch Ruin in southwest New Mexico, Harry Shafer offers new information and interpretations of the rise and disappearance of the ancient Mimbres culture that thrived in the area from about A.D. 600 to 1140.
- Copyright year: 2009
A Poetry of Remembrance
New and Rejected Works
Levi Romero recalls the tradiciones of life in northern New Mexico--a way of life seldom represented in American poetry.
- Copyright year: 2009
Andean Journeys
Migration, Ethnogenesis, and the State in Colonial Quito
A quantitative assessment of the impact of Spanish conquest and colonization on Andean population migration from 1535-1700.
- Copyright year: 2009
The Archaeologist Was a Spy
Sylvanus G. Morley and the Office of Naval Intelligence
Sylvanus G. Morley was the most influential Mayan archaeologist of his generation and perhaps the greatest American spy of WWI. Harris and Sadler document for the first time Morley's dual career as a scholar and a spy. Working for the Office of Naval Intelligence, he proved an invaluable source of information about German and anti-American activity in Mexico and Central America.
- Copyright year: 2009
The Secret War in El Paso
Mexican Revolutionary Intrigue, 1906-1920
The untold story of El Paso and its role as the scene of clandestine operations during the Mexican Revolution is revealed here for the first time.
- Copyright year: 2009
Religion as Art
Guadalupe, Orishas, and Sufi
These essays explore the relationship between religious practice and the arts in three different world cultures.
- Copyright year: 2009
Ghost Ranch and the Faraway Nearby
Varjabedian illuminates the dramatic cliffs and plains of Ghost Ranch, once the home of Georgia O'Keeffe.
- Copyright year: 2009
¿de Veras?
Young Voices from the National Hispanic Cultural Center
A collection of poetry, stories, and essays by New Mexico teens who have been part of the Voces creative writing program.
- Copyright year: 2009
Healing Ways
Navajo Health Care in the Twentieth Century
Chronicles the advent of so-called "western" or "scientific" medicine in the modern era, and how Navajos adapted, but did not compromise their traditional healings ways.
- Copyright year: 2001
Valles Caldera
A Geologic History
Formed by massive volcanic eruptions over a million years ago, the Valles Caldera offers scientists unprecedented opportunities for studying its geologic wonders, and now as a national preserve, it offers the public a unique outdoor experience.
- Copyright year: 2009
The Travails of Two Woodpeckers
Ivory-Bills and Imperials
The long, sad story of the failure of efforts to prevent the extinction of two of nature's most impressive woodpeckers offers lessons for preventing the extinctions of other species.
- Copyright year: 2009
The Ancient Southwest
Chaco Canyon, Bandelier, and Mesa Verde
Stuart's accessible stories of the ancient peoples and sites of the American Southwest have been updated with recent discoveries on Chaco Canyon, Bandelier, and Mesa Verde.
- Copyright year: 2009
The Adaptive Optics Revolution
A History
Duffner has compiled the history of the most revolutionary breakthrough in astronomy since Galileo pointed his telescope skyward--the technology that will greatly expand our understanding of the universe.
- Copyright year: 2009
San Juan Legacy
Life in the Mining Camps
Smith and Ninnemann chronicle the early years of the nineteenth century boomtowns in the mountains of western Colorado.
- Copyright year: 2009
Lost Mines and Buried Treasures of Arizona
The prospecting past of Arizona has been kept alive through the notorious tales included here.
- Copyright year: 2009
Life on the Rocks
One Woman's Adventures in Petroglyph Preservation
Artist Katherine Wells's life story starts with an early interest in Native art and the petroglyphs of the Southwest that drew her to New Mexico and led to a major effort to preserve the iconic images she found on her own land.
- Copyright year: 2009
Darfur
Niemeyer's travels in the Sudan are illustrated by his stunning color photographs of the people caught in the wrenching violence.
- Copyright year: 2009
Conquest and Catastrophe
Changing Rio Grande Pueblo Settlement Patterns in the Sixteenth and Seventeenth Centuries
A multifaceted reinterpretation of the Pueblo losses of settlements and population from 1540 until after reconquest at the end of the 1600s.
- Copyright year: 2009
The Fly-Fishing Predator
Raymond Shewnack invites fishermen to hone their hunting skills, sharpen their senses, and become predators in the trout stream.
- Copyright year: 2009
Kasha-Katuwe Tent Rocks National Monument
Color diagrams and graphics of the history of geologic formations, including the Rio Grande rift, provide background for understanding the area, and a detailed, durable topographic map provides information about trails and features for the day hiker.
- Copyright year: 2009
Hard Time at Tehachapi
California's First Women's Prison
The brief history of this controversial and experimental women's prison posed questions about crime and rehabilitation that remain unresolved today.
- Copyright year: 2009
Fire
The Spark That Ignited Human Evolution
Fire and light, and their impacts on our earliest human ancestor, are the subjects of this innovative study of the development of the species.
- Copyright year: 2009
Weighty Words, Too
Young readers will build their vocabularies with this new, amusing collection of weighty words.
- Copyright year: 2009
The Weighty Word Book
"Each of these twenty-six short stories takes an elaborate, circuitous path that leads to a 'weighty' one-word punch line."--School Library Journal
- Copyright year: 2009
Developing Zapatista Autonomy
Conflict and NGO Involvement in Rebel Chiapas
Based on his own experience and further research in Chiapas, Barmeyer provides an in-depth analysis of the advances and limitations of the Zapatista autonomy project over the past fourteen years.
- Copyright year: 2009
Simon J. Ortiz
A Poetic Legacy of Indigenous Continuance
This volume reveals the insights and aesthetics of Ortiz's indigenous lens.
- Copyright year: 2009
Paddy on the Hardwood
A Journey in Irish Hoops
A burned out basketball coach takes a job in Ireland and is surprised by what he finds.
- Copyright year: 2006
Land of a Thousand Dances
Chicano Rock 'n' Roll from Southern California
Reyes and Waldman tell the stories of Chicano rock music in Southern California and the musicians who continue to make pop music with a Latin beat.
- Copyright year: 2009