2004 Oxford Conference for the Book

Winter 2004 Issue
* Director’s Column
* Wharton Presentation 
*Gussow Wins Award for Blues Book
* Mildred D. Taylor Day to Be Celebrated During Book Conference
*Mississippi Delta Literary Tour
*Eudora Welty Program iin Jackson
*Gammill Gallery Exhibition Schedule
*Susan Lee Talks on Her Photographs
* Student Photography Exhibition
* SST Internship Endowment
* A Day in the Country
* Reading the South

* SST Student Assists Marshall with Local Research Profect
* SFA Director on Food Network
* SFA News
* SFA News: Book Review
* F&Y 2004
* Elderhostel
* F&Y 2005
* Mayfield
* 2003 Mississippi Delta Tennessee Williams Festival Report
* Regional Roundup
* Notes on Contributors




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NOTES ON CONTRIBUTORS


Angelina Altobellis joined the Center’s staff in July as advancement associate. She earned her M.A. in comparative literature from the University of Texas at Austin.


Donald M. Kartiganer
holds the William Howry Chair in Faulkner Studies at the University of Mississippi and is director of the Faulkner Conference. He is the author of The Fragile Thread: The Meaning of Form in Faulkner’s Novels and is near completion of a book-length study, “Repetition Forward: A Theory of Modernist Reading.”


Colby H. Kullman is professor of English at the University of Mississippi. Among his publications are articles on Tennessee Williams and other modern dramatists, Theatre Companies of the World, and Speaking on Stage: Interviews with Contemporary American Playwrights. He is coeditor of Studies in American Drama: 1945-Present.


Nash Molpus
is a second-year graduate student in Southern Studies at the University of Mississippi. She received her undergraduate degree at Furman University in Greenville, South Carolina. She is presently working as an intern at the William Winter Institute for Racial Reconciliation.


Jennifer Southall
is a communications specialist for the Office of Media and Public Relations at the University of Mississippi. She taught high school English and worked as a magazine editor before returning to the University, where she received a B.A. in English.


Jimmy Thomas is managing editor of a new edition of the Center’s Encyclopedia of Southern Culture. He received B.A. degrees in English and philosophy at the University of Mississippi and has worked for publications in Oxford and New York.


David Wharton
is assistant professor and director of documentary projects at the Center, where he teaches courses in Southern Studies, fieldwork, and photography. He is the author of The Soul of a Small Texas Town: Photographs, Memories, and History from McDade.


Charles Reagan Wilson is director of the Center and professor of history and Southern Studies. Among his publications are Baptized in Blood: the Religion of the Lost Cause and Judgment and Grace in Dixie: Southern Faiths from Faulkner to Elvis.


 

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