march 27 â 28, 2015 - Center for Global Initiatives
Transcription
march 27 â 28, 2015 - Center for Global Initiatives
HOT SALTY/SMOKY SOUR/BITTER SAVORY SWEET SHARP The State of The Plate: Food and the Local-Global Nexus brings together students, faculty, independent scholars, entrepreneurs, local organizations and community members to share current research, initiatives and insights that explore the history, aesthetics and contemporary politics of food from our local worlds in North Carolina to the global U.S. South. Throughout this interdisciplinary gathering, we consider implications and connections between the changing food worlds of the U.S. South and the inter-connected global environment we share. JOIN THE CONVERSATION #StateOfPlate The State of the Plate is chaired by Marcie Cohen Ferris (American Studies) and is part of the Global American South project. The conference is presented by the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill’s Center for Global Initiatives, Center for the Study of the American South, Department of American Studies and the Global Research Institute. Additional support provided by American Food Roots and the UNC Center for Health Promotion and Disease Prevention. Food and beverage is provided by the Carolina Brewery, The Crunkelton, Fuller’s Old Fashioned BBQ, Mediterranean Deli, NC Catch, Piedmont Wine Imports, The Root Cellar and Whole Foods. UNC.EDU/PLATE Food and the Local/Global Nexus MARCH 27 – 28, 2015 FedEx Global Education Center The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill WHAT’S IN THE SKILLET All sessions take place in the Nelson Mandela Auditorium, unless indicated FRIDAY, MARCH 27, 2015 SATURDAY, MARCH 28, 2015 1:00 – 2:00 p.m. 9:00 – 10:30 a.m. 1:30 – 3:00 p.m. REGISTRATION SOUR/BIT TER Kenneth Janken, Moderator James and Florence Peacock Atrium Elizabeth Engelhardt, Moderator John Shelton Reed Distinguished Professor of Southern Studies, UNC-CH 2:00 – 2:15 p.m Back to Grits and Gravy, Milk and Mush Jennifer Jensen Wallach, Associate Professor of History, University of North Texas WELCOME Deep in Our DNA: Moonshine in North Carolina Marcie Cohen Ferris Program Chair, State of the Plate and Associate Professor of American Studies, UNC-CH GREETINGS INVOCATION Senior Associate Dean, Fine Arts and Humanities, College of Arts and Sciences, UNC-CH Poetry Curator, State of the Plate and Professor of English and Comparative Literature, UNC-CH Terry Rhodes Michael McFee 2:15 – 3:30 p.m. HOT Sharon Holland, Moderator Associate Chair and Professor of American Studies, UNC-CH Daniel S. Pierce, Chair and Professor of History, UNC-Asheville Gary Crunkleton, Proprietor, The Crunkleton, Chapel Hill, N.C. Un Buen Carnicero Victoria Bouloubasis, Master’s Student of American Studies/Folklore, UNC-CH Lumbee Indians and the Collard Sandwich Sara Wood, Oral Historian, Southern Foodways Alliance Jefferson Curie II, Folklorist and Collaborator, Work and Cook and Eat: Lumbee Indians of North Carolina Oral History Project 10:30 – 10:45 a.m. REFRESHMENTS James and Florence Peacock Atrium Hearts Strangely Warm: Religious Allegories of Industrial Food Chad Seales, Assistant Professor of Religious Studies, University of Texas Mississippi Corn Belt or Brazil’s Cerrado: How Global Warming is Impacting the Menu for North Carolina’s Pigs Rachel A. Willis, Associate Professor of American Studies and Faculty Fellow, Global Research Institute, UNC-CH Home in a New Place: Making Laos in Morganton, North Carolina Katy Clune, Master’s Student of American Studies/Folklore, UNC-CH 3:30 – 3:45 p.m. REFRESHMENTS James and Florence Peacock Atrium 10:45 – 12:15 p.m. SWEET Peter Coclanis, Moderator Director, Global Research Institute and Albert R. Newsome Distinguished Professor of History, UNC-CH Growing Up with a Chinese Jamaican Plate and Palate: A Tribute to my Uncle Frank and my Place in the Global South Jennifer Ho, Associate Professor of English, UNC-CH Sweet Treats, Bitter Dust: Mexican Women and Pecans in San Antonio in the Early 20th Century Monica Perales, Associate Professor of History, University of Houston As I Lay Dying, Bananas and Transhemispheric Plantation Modernity David A. Davis, Associate Professor of English, Mercer University 3:45 – 5:15 p.m. SALTY/SMOKY Malinda Maynor Lowery, Moderator Associate Professor of History and Director, Southern Oral History Program, UNC-CH Getting to the Root: A Portrait of Migrant Farm Labor in North Carolina Mary Johnson Rockers, Farmworker Health Operations Specialist, North Carolina Farmworker Health Program Caroline Phillips, Master’s Student of Social Work, UNC-CH and Farmworker Advocacy Network Blueberry Diplomacy Good Fried Chicken and Cornbread: Culinary Contradictions in Appalachian Travels: The Diary of Olive Dame Campbell Erica Abrams Locklear, Associate Professor of Literature & Language, UNC-Asheville Gathering around the Sofkee Pot: Seminole Foodways and Identity in Florida Mikaela M. Adams, Assistant Professor of History, University of Mississippi Healthy Hushpuppies: A Southern Food Encounter in Lenoir County, North Carolina Alice Ammerman, Director, Center for Health Promotion and Disease Prevention and Professor of Nutrition, UNC-CH From Colewort to the New Kale: Collards and Global Connections in the South Jamie Ross, Producer and Writer, Red Dirt Productions Ed Davis, Professor of Geography, Emory and Henry College Leni Sorensen, Independent Scholar 3:00-3:15 p.m. REFRESHMENTS James and Florence Peacock Atrium 3:15 – 4:45 p.m. SHARP Marcie Cohen Ferris, Moderator Program Chair, State of the Plate and Associate Professor of American Studies, UNC-CH Crook's Corner: The Demography of a North Carolina Future Randall Kenan, Professor of Creative Writing, UNC-CH Traditions of Necessity in the Global South Jay Murrie, Piedmont Wine Imports, Durham, N.C. The Nitty Gritty of Shrimp and Grits: Race and Class in Coastal South Carolina Elijah Heyward, III, Doctoral Student of American Studies, UNC-CH A Feast of Poems Tara Powell, Associate Professor of English, University of South Carolina 12:15 – 1:30 p.m. 4:45 – 5:15 p.m. LUNCH COLLARD SANDWICH RECEPTION James and Florence Peacock Atrium James and Florence Peacock Atrium 5:15 – 7:15 p.m. N.C. Catch Real Local Seafood Fast Food Region Director, Center for the Study of the American South and Professor of African, African American, and Diaspora Studies, UNC-CH Rob Bowers, Whitted Bowers Farm, Cedar Grove, N.C. Margaret Gifford, Founder, Watervine Impact, New York City and Chatham Co., N.C. Karen Willis Amspacher, Director, Core Sound Waterfowl Museum & Heritage Center Morty Gaskill, Fisherman, Ocracoke, N.C. Fitzhugh Brundage, Chair and William B. Umstead Distinguished Professor of History, UNC-CH Peter Coclanis, Director, Global Research Institute and Albert Ray Newsome Distinguished Professor of History, UNC-CH SAVORY JOIN US ON FRIDAY AT 6 P.M. Southern Cultures Food Issue Release Party Southern Season, University Mall, Chapel Hill, N.C. (ticketed separately, see southerncultures.org for information) DINNER ON THE TOWN For nearby recommendations, visit: go.unc.edu/n8SRi Evening program continues, please see insert. FEATURING Vivian Howard & Ben Knight STARS OF THE PBS DOCUMENTARY Food and the Local/Global Nexus ALFRED DUPONT CHANDLER, JR. LECTURE The Transformative Power of Food & Region: One Ingredient at a Time Saturday, March 28, 7:30 p.m. FedEx Global Education Center The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill 7:30 – 8:45 p.m. Alfred Dupont Chandler, Jr. Lecture THE TRANSFORMATIVE POWER OF FOOD & REGION: ONE INGREDIENT AT A TIME Chef Vivian Howard & Ben Knight Owners, Chef & the Farmer restaurant in Kinston, N.C. and stars of the Peabody-winning, PBS cooking show and documentary, A Chef’s Life Cynthia Hill Producer/Director of A Chef’s Life Malinda Maynor Lowery Co-Producer of A Chef’s Life; Associate Professor of History and Director, Southern Oral History Program, UNC-CH 8:45 – 9:30 p.m. Dessert Reception WINE AND SHINE: A CAPSTONE CELEBRATION OF FLAVOR James and Florence Peacock Atrium The Alfred Dupont Chandler, Jr. Lectureship in Southern Business History was established in 1998 at the Center for the Study of the American South to encourage the study of Southern business and economic history. The lectureship brings distinguished and innovative scholars to UNC-Chapel Hill annually to participate in seminars, to consult with faculty and students and to present a public lecture on a topic related to the South’s business or economic history. A FOCUS ON FOOD As a research university, Carolina must tackle tough, crosscutting global challenges. UNC-Chapel Hill has led this charge by establishing universitywide research themes. Recognizing UNC’s research strengths in areas relating to food and the widespread interest in these issues from students, faculty, staff and the community, UNC has announced food as its panuniversity research focus for two years beginning in 2015. Food presents itself as a natural choice due to: 1) the central importance of food issues and cultures in today’s world, 2) the impressive food-related research of faculty members and students across campus, 3) the range and diversity of courses taught at UNC on food-related subjects, 4) the large number of students and campus organizations interested in food issues, 5) community interest and support for sustainable agriculture and 6) the robust food culture in the Triangle area. The Global Research Institute will also focus on “Feeding a Hungry World: Food Security in the 21st Century” through 2017.