the the newsletter of the
Center for the Study of Southern Culture • Summer 2011
the university of mississippi
New Faculty Members Join Center The Center welcomes four new faculty members to the Southern Studies program this fall. Bringing the number of Southern Studies faculty to 10, these professors will bring new specialties to the Center and add to current interests. Two of the new faculty members are tenure-track assistant professors in the Department of Sociology and Anthropology, and the other two will teach classes in both Southern Studies and history. Barbara Harris Combs comes to the Center from Georgia, where she has been teaching sociology at Shorter College. She received her PhD in sociology at Georgia State University after studying both English and political sci-
Barbara Harris Combs
Angela “Jill” Cooley
Jodi Skipper
ence at Xavier University in her hometown of Cincinnati and receiving a law degree at Ohio State. Combs wrote a dissertation entitled “The Ties That Bind: The Role of Place in Racial Identity Formation, Social Cohesion, Accord, and Discord in Two Historic, Black Gentrifying Atlanta Neighborhoods.” A joint appointment in Southern Studies and Anthropology, Jodi Skipper spent 2010–11 as a postdoctoral fellow at the University of South Carolina. An anthropologist with archaeological training, Skipper wrote a dissertation at the University of Texas entitled “In the Neighborhood: City Planning, Archaeology, and Cultural Heritage Politics at St. Paul United Methodist Church, Dallas, Texas.” A Grambling BA graduate and native of Louisiana,
Michele Grigsby Coffey continued on page 3