Sussex Academic Press

Sussex Academic Press, founded in 1994, is a publishing company based in Eastbourne, East Sussex, United Kingdom.[1] It initially specialised in Middle East studies.[2]

Sussex Academic Press
Founded1994
Country of originUnited Kingdom
Headquarters locationEastbourne
Key peopleAnthony Grahame (editorial director)
Publication typesBooks
Nonfiction topicsHumanities and Social Sciences
ImprintsThe Alpha Press
Official websitewww.sussex-academic.com (United Kingdom)

The house published books on issues of contemporary relevance and debate in Middle East topics,[3] Theology & Religion,[3] History (especially Portuguese, Spanish and Huguenot history),[1] and Literary Criticism,[3] as well as Latin American, First Nations, and Asian studies.[3]

Its series on the Portuguese-Speaking World: Its History, Politics and Culture is under the editorship of António Costa Pinto, Onésimo T. Almeida and Miguel Bandeira Jerónimo.[3]

In 2022, Liverpool University Press (LUP) announced its acquisition of Sussex Academic Press as part of its digital publishing strategy, allowing it access to Sussex Academic Press's 1,000-book backlist.[2]

Authors and publications

  • Bel, Germà (2012): Infrastructure and the political economy of nation building in Spain 1720–2010
  • Blocksidge, Martin (2013): The banker poet: the rise and fall of Samuel Rogers, 1763-1855
  • Britton, R. K. (2019): Don Quixote and the Subversive Tradition of Golden Age Spain
  • Graham, Helen (2014): The War and Its Shadow: Spain's Civil War in Europe's Long Twentieth Century
  • Jordan, Bill (2001): Who Cares for Planet Earth?: The Con in Conservation
  • Laskier, Michael M. & Ronen Yitzhak (2023): Israel and the Mediterranean: Five Decades of Uneasy Coexistence
  • Lowe, Sid (2010). Catholicism, War and the Foundation of Francoism: The Juventud De Acción Popular in Spain, 1931-1939
  • Petersen, Tore T. (2009): Richard Nixon, Great Britain and the Anglo-American Alignment in the Persian Gulf and Arabian Peninsula: Making Allies out of Clients[4]
  • Smith, Donna (2012): Sex, Lies and Politics: Gay Politicians and the Press[5]
  • Townson, Nigel, ed. (2015): Is Spain Different? A Comparative Look at the 19th and 20th Centuries[6]
  • Vigne, Randolph & Charles Littleton (2001): From Strangers to Citizens: The Integration of Immmigrant Communities in Britain, Ireland and Colonial America, 1550–1750

References

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