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2008 Annual Report

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North Carolina Humanities Council
Announces Six New Board Members

The North Carolina Humanities Council announces that six new members have joined the Council board as of October 2008. Five have been appointed to serve by Governor Mike Easley.*

Shown left to right:

*Dr. Glen Anthony Harris is Associate Professor of History at UNC Wilmington and author of numerous articles, including African American-Jewish relations during the first decades of the twentieth century; postmodern slave narrative; and interracial marriage.
*Dr. Tom Hanchett has served as staff historian at Charlotte’s Levine Museum of the New South since 1999, where has curated a string of prize-winning exhibitions.
Dr. Reginald Hildebrand is Associate Professor of African and Afro-American Studies at UNC Chapel Hill.
*Mr. Jonathan Howes is Special Assistant to the Chancellor and Adjunct Professor of Regional Planning and Public Policy at UNC Chapel Hill.
*Ms. Carol Lawrence is aprofessional writer and editor from Asheville and the principal with Carol Lawrence Consulting.
*Dr. Hephzibah Roskelly is former Director of the Composition Program at UNC Greensboro, and now holds the Women’s Studies Professorship. 

> Read press release.

North Carolina Conversations

Summer 2008 Edition 

Now Available

> Read Conversations

> Order a printed copy

(see Calendar for more infor.)

Road Scholars Events

New Harmonies

NC host sites announced for Smithsonian Exhibit "New Harmonies," part of the Museum
on Main Street program.

>> More information.

Dec 3 - Tom Magnuson: Trading

             Paths - England's   

             Contact Era in NC

             Durham County

 

Dec 4 - Mary Wayne Watson:

            John Charles McNeill -

            Poet Laureate's Home

            Songs

            Wake County

            Doug Bulter: Tiebele to

            Timbuktu - West Africa's

            Tribal Cultures

            Wilkes County

            EJ Stewart: Forgotten

            Rural Black Women

            Wake County

Dec 6 - Randell Jones:

             Scoundrels, Rogues, and

             Heroes of the Old North

             State

             McDowell County

             

           

Walt Wolfram Receives Caldwell Award for the Humanities

(Oct. 23, Raleigh, NC) Dr. Walt Wolfram received the 2008 John Tyler Caldwell Award for the Humanities, presented at North Carolina State University. UNC President William C. Friday delivered the annual Caldwell Lecture in the Humanities.

NC Literary Hall of Fame

Inducts Three Members

(Oct. 19, Southern Pines, NC) James Applewhite, William S. Powell, and Lee Smith received the prestigious honor at the Weymouth Center for the Arts and Humanities in Southern Pines, NC.

Together We Read:

Boone by Robert Morgan
A series of events sponsored by Together We Read to support the seventh-annual Western North Carolina community book-read about historical truth, ecology, European-Indian relations, and African Americans on the frontier.

vintage photo child labor in gaston county, 1908

Standing on a Box:

Lewis Hine's National Child Labor Committee Photography in Gaston County, 1908

A photography exhibition,

November 8, 2008 through February 21, 2009.

Gaston County Museum

of Art & History
131 West Main Street

Dallas, North Carolina

Matching Grants Awarded to 11 Cultural Projects Across NC

Over $79,000 in grants was awarded in June to eleven NC cultural and educational organizations to conduct humanities programs. The funded groups match the Humanities Council’s grants with in-kind and cash contributions. “The projects are integral to the Humanities Council’s commitment to vital conversations that nurture the culture and heritage of North Carolina,” says Shelley Crisp, Executive Director.  > Read detailed press release.

Funded programs include:
Twilight of a Neighborhood:
Asheville’s East End—1970

An oral history/photography project to be conducted by the Trust Fund
of the Asheville-Buncombe Library System about the East End, a vital African American neighborhood that largely disappeared after urban renewal.

As I See It:

Transitioning Back into the Community
A photography/video/writing initiative by the Center for Community Transitions designed to assist ex-offenders re-enter the Charlotte community after incarceration to help reduce recidivism and improve a re-entry client’s quality of life.

Medicine in the Roanoke-Chowan Area

— Past and Present
A multi-faceted project sponsored by the Roanoke-Chowan Hospital
to commemorate the 60th anniversary of the founding of hospital and the 160th anniversary of Chowan University.

Standing on a Box: Lewis Hine’s National Child Labor Committee Photography in Gaston County, 1908
A multi-part humanities project sponsored by the Gaston County Public Library that focuses on social documentarian Lewis Hine’s investigative photography of child workers in early 20th-century Gaston County textile mills.

The Beloved Community—
Third Annual Carolina Mountains Literary Festival

A festival sponsored by the Carolina Mountains Literary Festival Association in Burnsville designed to bring folks together to celebrate each other through literature: including novels, poetry, and children’s stories; book and paper making; storytelling; workshops; live music; a hand-made book display; and special exhibits.

African American Voices:

Between Two Rivers
An oral history initiative sponsored by the Neuse River Community Development Corporation in New Bern to preserve the legacies of elderly African Americans by sharing their own stories of education, religion, social and economic development, civil rights, and traditional customs.

Development of Gumbo Ya Ya
or This is Why We Speak in Tongues

A twelve-week creative workshop sponsored by SpiritHouse for African American women in Durham communities to empower women to speak their truths about ‘lived experiences,’ ‘intimate histories,’ the environment, and personal growth.”

Gone to the Poorhouse
A documentary produced by the Yadkin County Historical Society that examines how the definition of poverty has evolved by looking at the history of “poorhouses” in North Carolina, many of which included the mentally ill, disabled, elderly, and orphaned.


The Legend of Nance Dude
One-woman performances of the play, based on a true story from 1913 that offers a nuanced analysis of the tragic realities of domestic violence and child abuse, by Western North Carolina folklorist Gary Carden, based on the novel by Maurice Stanly and sponsored by the Haywood Arts Regional Theater in Waynesville.
A Mind of Her Own: Fathers and Daughters in a Changing World
A six-week, scholar-guided book discussion in the Let’s Talk About It series about Jewish literature, identity and imagination, sponsored by the Durham County Library.