West Virginia University Press is the only university press, and the largest publisher of any kind, in the state of West Virginia. A part of West Virginia University, they publish books and scholarly journals by authors around the world, with a particular emphasis on Appalachian studies, history, higher education, the social sciences, and interdisciplinary books about energy, environment, and resources. They also publish works of fiction and creative nonfiction, and collaborate on innovative digital publications, notably West Virginia History: An Open Access Reader.
DEFENDING THE HOMELAND
"HISTORICAL PERSPECTIVES ON RADICALISM, TERRORISM, AND STATE RESPONSES"
- Copyright year: 2007
BRINGING DOWN THE MOUNTAINS
THE IMPACT OF MOUTAINTOP REMOVAL SURFACE COAL MINING ON SOUTHERN WEST VIRGINIA COMMUNITIES
Coal is West Virginia’s bread and butter. For more than a century, West Virginia has answered the energy call of the nation—and the world—by mining and exporting its coal. In 2004, West Virginia’s coal industry provided almost forty thousand jobs directly related to coal, and it contributed $3.5 billion to the state’s gross annual product. And in the same year, West Virginia led the nation in coal exports, shipping over 50 million tons of coal to twenty-three countries. Coal has made millionaires of some and paupers of many. For generations of honest, hard-working West Virginians, coal has put food on tables, built homes, and sent students to college. But coal has also maimed, debilitated, and killed.
Bringing Down the Mountains provides insight into how mountaintop removal has affected the people and the land of southern West Virginia. It examines the mechanization of the mining industry and the power relationships between coal interests, politicians, and the average citizen. Shirley Stewart Burns holds a BS in news-editorial journalism, a master’s degree in social work, and a PhD in history with an Appalachian focus, from West Virginia University. A native of Wyoming County in the southern West Virginia coalfields and the daughter of an underground coal miner, she has a passionate interest in the communities, environment, and histories of the southern West Virginia coalfields. She lives in Charleston, West Virginia.
- Copyright year: 2007
POTOMAC CANAL
GEORGE WASHINGTON AND THE WATERWAY WEST
- Copyright year: 2007
THE WAY THINGS ALWAYS HAPPEN HERE
- Copyright year: 2007
SEARCH FOR ORIGINS IN THE TWENTIETH-CENTURY LONG POEM
"SUMERIAN, HOMERIC, ANGLO-SAXON"
- Copyright year: 2007
POSTMODERN BEOWULF
A CRITICAL CASEBOOK
- Copyright year: 2006
PINNICK KINNICK HILL
AN AMERICAN STORY
- Copyright year: 2003
INNOVATION AND TRADITION IN THE WRITINGS OF THE VENERABLE BEDE
- Copyright year: 2006
ANCIENT PRIVILEGES
"BEOWULF,LAW, AND THEMAKING OF GERMANIC ANTIQUITY"
- Copyright year: 2006
FINDING A CLEAR PATH
- Copyright year: 2006
Cancer Stories: Lessons in Love, Loss, and Hope
- Copyright year: 2005
SPRING WILDFLOWERS OF WEST VIRGINIA
- Copyright year: 2005
WONDROUS LOVE
APPALACHIAN CHAMBER MUSIC
- Copyright year: 2004
OLD ENGLISH LITERATURE IN ITS MANUSCRIPT CONTEXT
- Copyright year: 2004
BLANCHE LAZZELL
THE LIFE AND WORK OF AN AMERICAN MODERNIST
Blanche Lazzell went from Maidsville, West Virginia, to the leading edge of twentieth-century American art. A member of the prominent art communities of Paris and Provincetown, MA during the '20s and '30s, Lazzell was always on the fringe of important developments in the modern art world. Her studies in Paris led her to adopt the techniques of modernism as well as other emerging styles. Among her groundbreaking works were some of the first examples of abstraction in America. Blanche Lazzell: The Life and Work of an American Modernist is a significant contribution to the history of twentieth-century American art.
Know primarily as a Provincetown printmaker, Lazzell’s full life and career are presented here, generously accompanied by color reproductions of her work, showing the breadth of her accomplishment in painting, printmaking, and hooked rugs. Lazzell's true contribution to American art history was never fully appreciated during her lifetime. A renewed interest in the artist has developed over the past fifteen years, due mostly to the critical appreciation of her color wood block prints. She is worth remembering not only for her own work, but also for her role as a translator of the achievements of the European modernists for her colleagues in America. In Blanche Lazzell: The Life and Work of an American Modernist, nine essays and hundreds of full-color illustrations bring this incredibly talented and influential artist's work to life.
- Copyright year: 2004
TRANSNATIONAL WEST VIRGINIA
"ETHNIC COMMUNITIES AND ECONOMIC CHANGE, 1840-1940"
- Copyright year: 2002
HOLLOWS, PEEPERS, AND HIGHLANDERS
AN APPALACHIAN MOUNTAIN ECOLOGY
- Copyright year: 2004
INSIDE PITCH AND MORE
BASEBALL'S BUSINESS AND THE PUBLIC TRUST
- Copyright year: 2004
NAKED BEFORE GOD
UNCOVERING THE BODY IN ANGLO-SAXON ENGLAND
- Copyright year: 2003
THEORIZING ANGLO-SAXON STONE SCULPTURE
- Copyright year: 2003
CLASH OF LOYALTIES
A BORDER COUNTY IN THE CIVIL WAR
A border county in a border state, Barbour County, West Virginia felt the full terror and tragedy of the Civil War. The wounds of the Civil War cut most bitterly in the border states, that strip of America from Maryland to Kansas, where conflicting loyalties and traditions ripped apart communities, institutions, and families. Barbour County, in the mountainous Northwest of (West) Virginia, is a telling microcosm of the deep divisions which both caused the war and were caused by it. By examining and interpreting long-ignored documents of the times and the personal accounts of the people who were there, Clash of Loyalties offers a startling new view of America's most bitter hour. Nearly half of the military-age men in the county served in the armed forces, almost perfectly divided between the Union and the Confederacy. After West Virginia split with Virginia to rejoin the Union, Confederate soldiers from the regions could not safely visit their homes on furlough, or even send letters to their families. The county's two leading political figures, Samuel Woods and Spencer Dayton, became leaders of the fight for and against secession, dissolved their close personal friendship, and never spoke to one another again. The two factions launched campaigns of terror and intimidation, leading to the burning of several homes, the kidnapping of a sheriff, the murder of a pacifist minister, and the self-imposed exile of many of the county's influential families. The conflicting loyalties crossed nearly all social and economic lines; even the county's slave owners were evenly divided between Union and Confederate sympathies. With a meticulous examination of census and military records, geneologies, period newspapers, tax rolls, eyewitness accounts, and other relevant documents, Clash of Loyalties presents a compelling account of the passion and violence which tore apart Barbour County and the nation.
- Copyright year: 2003
WEST VIRGINIA AND THE CAPTAINS OF INDUSTRY
- Copyright year: 2003
The Blackwater Chronicle
West Virginia University English Professor Timothy Sweet edited the second volume in our West Virginia and Appalachia series. The Blackwater Chronicle by Philip Pendleton Kennedy was originally published in 1853, but this wilderness travelogue about the exploration of Canaan Valley has appeal far beyond that time and region. In fact, it was originally published in New York and London, and even in a German edition. This often humorous and always fascinating story, told by Kennedy about the journey he and his colleagues took into yet unexplored territory, will make the reader long for days when there was still wilderness on this continent. It will also be of interest to the outdoorsman and should be viewed as an environmental cautionary tale.
- Copyright year: 2019
BACKCOUNTRY
CONTEMPORARY WRITING IN WEST VIRGINIA
This is as closely-knit an anthology as you are ever likely to see. It is as though a large, extended family were drawing on the same store of family stories, jokes, symbols, landscapes, animals, trees, language, and vernacular. How many snakes are in this book? How many foxes, possums? Fossils? And how very many coal mines? But it is not merely local references that unites these writers. There is a larger vision that ties these works together.
"The connection is not so much in mutual influence, though there is some of that, but in each writer’s total immersion in place. Even those writers who no longer live in the state remember the feel, the physical texture, the overwhelming and enfolding vegetal surround of the place." Editor, Irene McKinney
- Copyright year: 2002
VIA CRUCIS
ESSAYS ON EARLY MEDIEVAL SOURCES AND IDEAS
- Copyright year: 2002
SMOKELESS COAL FIELDS OF WEST VIRGINIA
A BRIEF HISTORY
- Copyright year: 2001
EARLY ART AND ARTISTS IN WEST VIRGINIA
AN INTRODUCTION AND BIOGRAPHICAL DIRECTORY
- Copyright year: 2000
WOODY PLANTS IN WINTER
- Copyright year: 1958