Cover Story:  
"Faulkner and the Ecology of the South"

Spring 2003 Issue
*2003 F&Y Conference
* Director’s Column
* Southern Studies Faculty News
* First International Conference on Race
* Student Photography Exhibition
* Bertolaet Exhibion
* Gammill Gallery Exhibition Schedule
*2004 F&Y Call for Papers
* Teacher Seminars
*Brown Bag Schedule
* History Symposium
*Tennessee Williams Festival
*Mississippi Traditional Music Project
*Living Blues Symposium
*Reading the South
*Southern Foodways Alliance News
* 2003 Oxford Conference for the Book
* Tennessee Williams Tribute and Tour 
* Etta King Torrey: A Rememberance
* Regional Roundup
*Notes on Contributors
*Ensley Gives Meredith Photo to Center

 

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"FAULKNER AND THE ECOLOGY OF THE SOUTH"
Faulkner and Yoknapatawpha
July 20-24, 2003

     The heart of ecology is relationship: at the fullest and most complex level, the relations between human beings and the entire array of their physical and social environments. Much of our attention to Faulkner’s fiction has been, not surprisingly, on the individual. His work is filled with memorable characters, many of whom are memorable precisely because of their uniqueness, often their isolation, within the community. Now, as our concern with ecology grows, our recognition that in many ways the determination of the quality of our lives lies in how we relate to each other and to the world at large, we begin to see how Faulkner’s work, his Yoknapatawpha world, is about relationship: How his distinct communities, black and white, town and country, native and foreign, relate to each other. How characters necessarily encounter natural and built environments that always precede them, structuring their actions. How person and place become virtually a single, inseparable unit of being.  
     Some of the topics of "Faulkner and the Ecology of the South" that will be taken up by nine lecturers and six panelists will be the significance of the highly varied places of Absalom, Absalom!, the representation of labor in The Hamlet, comparison of the representations of Yoknapatawpha and Lafayette County in Faulkner’s novels and John McCrady’s paintings, Faulkner’s Native Americans and the plantation economy.  
   In addition to the formal lectures and panel discussions, Tom Franklin will give a reading from his new novel Hell at the Breech. There will also be sessions on Teaching Faulkner, tours of North Mississippi, announcement of the winner of the 14th Faux Faulkner Contest, readings from Faulkner, and an assortment of social gatherings, including a buffet supper at historic Isom Place, a picnic at Rowan Oak, and a closing party at Square Books.  
     For more information about the conference, contact the Office of Professional Development and Non-Credit Education, Post Office Box 879, The University of Mississippi, University, MS 38677-0879; telephone 662-915-7283; fax 662-915-5138; e-mail noncred@olemiss.edu; www.outreach.olemiss.edu or www.olemiss.edu/depts/south/faulkner/index.htm.   
     For information about participating in the conference through Elderhostel, call 877-426-8056 and refer to the program number 5760, or contact Carolyn Vance Smith by telephone (601-446-1208) or e-mail (carolyn.smith@colin.edu).

DONALD M. KARTIGANER


  

  Oxford on the Hill, by John McCrady (1911-1968), is used as the illustration for the 2003 Faulkner and Yoknapatawpha Conference poster and program courtesy of the City of Oxford, owner of the painting. Flat copies of this poster and another one with a McCrady painting, Political Rally, are available for $10.00 each plus $3.50 postage and handling. Mississippi residents add 7 percent sales tax. Send all orders to the Center for the Study of Southern Culture with a check made payable to the University of Mississippi or with Visa or MasterCard account number and expiration date. Credit card orders also may be made by calling 800-390-3527.
     

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