BAAS Pamphlets in American Studies
This series of pamphlets, published by the British Association for American Studies, was a series designed to make widely available the fruits of research and thinking on major problems in all areas of American Studies. Now discontinued, this series has been replaced by a new paperback series. 23 of the 28 pamphlets are now available free on this website.
- Peter J. Parish, Slavery: the Many Faces of a Southern Institution
- J.A. Thompson, Progressivism
- John D. Lees, The President and the Supreme Court: New Deal to Watergate
- Philip Davies, The Metropolitan Mosaic: Problems of the Contemporary City
- Stan Smith, A Sadly Contracted Hero: the Comic Self in Post-War American Fiction
- Robert H. Fossum & John K. Roth, The American Dream
- James T. Patterson, The Welfare State in America, 1930-1980
- David Murray, Modern Indians
- Malcolm Bradbury, The Expatriate Tradition in American Literature
- Edward A. Abramson, The Immigrant Experience in American Literature
- A. Robert Lee, Black American Fiction since Richard Wright
- Mick Gidley, American Photography
- Edward Countryman, The People's American Revolution
- Michael Allen, Emily Dickinson as an American Provincial Poet
- W.A. Speck, British America 1607-1776
- Brian Lee, Hollywood
- David Timms, Nathaniel Hawthorne
- Richard Crockatt, The United States and the Cold War 1941-53
- Michael Woodiwiss, Organized Crime, USA: Changing Perceptions from Prohibition to the Present Day
- Jay Kleinberg, Women in American Society 1820-1920
- John White, Martin Luther King, Jr., and the Civil Rights Movement in America
- John Dumbrell, Vietnam: American Involvement at Home and Abroad
- Ralph Willett, Hard-Boiled Detective Fiction
- Richard Walsh, Radical Theatre in the Sixties and Seventies
- Geoff Ward, Language Poetry and the American Avant-garde
- Peter Coates, In Nature’s Defence: Americans and Conservation
- Shirley Foster, American Women Travellers to Europe in the Nineteenth and Early Twentieth Centuries
- Mark Jancovich, American Horror from 1951
