The University of Hawaiʻi Press was founded in 1947, publishing research in all disciplines of the humanities and natural and social sciences in the regions of Asia and Pacific. The Press's core mission revolves around the acquisition of books and journals that support new scholarship, enhance student success, and nurture Native Hawaiian ways of learning. UH Press has an especially distinguished list in Asian studies and is recognized as a leader in the fields of Buddhist studies and Southeast Asian studies.

Subjects
Lyrical Translation The Creation of Modern Poetry in Colonial Korea David Krolikoski
The Invention of a Language of Emptiness The “Ch’ojang chungga-ŭi,” the Earliest Korean Exposition of Buddhism Robert E. Buswell, Jörg Plassen, Yeonshik Choe
Mother Tree, Daughter Seed Lessons in Slow Growth Mārata Ketekiri Tamaira, Carl Franklin Ka‘ailā‘au Pao
An Unfamiliar Place Poetry, Power, and the Travel Memoir in Medieval Japan Kendra Strand
Modernity and Malevolence in the Psychiatric Clinic Anxious Selves in Urban and Rural South India Andrew C. Willford
The Myth of the Natural Laboratory Science, Empire, and Their Derangements on Pitcairn and Norfolk Islands Adrian Young
Vestiges of the Three Kingdoms of Ancient Korea A Translation of the Samguk yusa Robert E. Buswell, Frits Vos, Remco E. Breuker, Boudewijn C. A. Walraven, Grace Koh
Peripheral Linguistic Brutality Metal Languaging in the Asia Pacific Jess Kruk, Wesley C. Robertson, Allison Alexy
Loving and Loathing Wildlife in Japan Four Animal Conservation Paradigms W. Puck Brecher
Worldly Engagements Buddhist Monasticism and Masculinity among the Tai Lue of Southwest China Roger Casas, Mark Michael Rowe
Bold Breaks Japanese Women and Literary Narratives of Divorce Sohyun Chun, Rebecca L. Copeland, Charo D'Etcheverry, Eleanor Hogan, Anne Sokolsky, Kaoru Tamura, Laurel Taylor
Legacies of Incarceration The World War II Experience of Hawai‘i’s Japanese Kelli Y. Nakamura
Beyond the Sewol Activist Theatre and Performance in South Korea and the Diaspora Areum Jeong
Kani ka ʻŌpala How Can Garbage Sing? Benjamin Fairfield
Indigeneity in the Philippines Studies on Knowledge, Identity, and Rights Lisa Decenteceo, Juan Fernandez, Io Mones. Jularbal, Antoine Laugrand, Frédéric Laugrand, Gliseria Magapin, Maria Cecilia T. Medina, Jansen Taruc Nacar, Maileenita A. Penalba, Oona Paredes, June Chayapan Prill-Brett, Roland Erwin P. Rabang, Kyla Agnes L. Ramirez, J.A. Ruanto-Ramirez, Fernan Talamayan, Jazil Tamang, Jose R. Taton, Ruth M. Tindaan, Merry Grace Valencia-Furtuna, Michelle L. Villavert, Karminn C.D. Daytec Yañgot, Leah Abayao, Jimmy Fong, Carolyn Podruchny
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