Southern Register Winter 2009

Page 1

the THE NEWSLETTER OF THE

CENTER FOR THE STUDY OF SOUTHERN CULTURE • WINTER 2009

THE UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI

Ted Ownby Named Director of Center

David Wharton

A

fter searching far and wide for a new director for the Center for the Study of Southern Culture, it turns out the ideal candidate was in the Center’s own backyard. Former interim director Ted Ownby, professor of History and Southern Studies, was chosen to take the helm as permanent director in December. “We did a full scale, international search, and we had lots of candidates who applied and visited campus and at the end of the process we had not hired anyone,” Ownby said. So this fall, he decided to apply. Ownby, who earned his BA from Vanderbilt and MA and doctorate from Johns Hopkins, is a coeditor of the forthcoming Mississippi Encyclopedia and coeditor of the Gender volume in The New Encyclopedia of Southern Culture. He is the author of two books, Subduing Satan: Religion, Recreation, and Manhood in the Rural South, 1865–1920 and American Dreams in Mississippi: Consumers, Poverty, and Culture, 1830– 1998, and he has edited collections of essays on slavery, the role of ideas in the civil rights movement, and manners in Southern history. He said he enjoys working with the wide range of people and activities at the Center. “I realized a long time ago that part of what attracts people

Ted Ownby to Southern Studies is the freedom to be creative, through interdisciplinary scholarship or through connections between scholarship and the rest of the world. That freedom has brought the Center people who have unique abilities,” Ownby said. “The Center encourages new ideas, and our academic program draws majors and graduate students who are willing to have a unique degree. The students tend to be openminded and have their own ideas about what an education should be, and our

faculty and staff both respond to and help shape a lot of those ideas.” Ownby says that it is crucial that Southern Studies keeps changing. “Part of the excitement of this program is that the students change, academia certainly changes, and the South itself keeps changing. Part of our job is to take the topics that bring people to Southern Studies, study those topics well, and also to expand the range continued on page 3


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