WILLIAM R. FERRIS Chairman, National Endowment for the Humanities
As an author, folklorist, filmmaker and academic
administrator, William R. Ferris has compiled a distinguished
record of achievement and leadership in the humanities during a
career spanning nearly three decades.
Before becoming chairman of the National Endowment for the
Humanities in November 1997, Dr. Ferris served for 18 years as
founding director of the Center for the Study of Southern Culture
at the University of Mississippi in Oxford. Under his
leadership, the University of Mississippi developed the most
comprehensive southern studies curriculum in the nation, and the
center, with an interdisciplinary approach incorporating popular,
folk, historical and literary subjects, attained national
recognition as a model for regional studies centers. In 1993 the
center was named a nongovernmental organization affiliated with
the United Nations.
A professor of anthropology and a prolific author, Dr.
Ferris spearheaded the creation of the best-selling
Encyclopedia of Southern Culture, published in 1989.
Containing entries on every aspect of southern culture and widely
recognized as a major reference work linking popular, folk and
academic cultures, the volume was nominated for a Pulitzer Prize.
In Russia, eastern Europe and Australia it has been used as a
tool for understanding cultural and social diversity.
Dr. Ferris's scholarship covers the fields of folklore,
American literature, music and photography. Among his books are
Ray Lum's Tales of Horses, Mules, and Men (1992), Local
Color (1982), Images of the South: Visits with Eudora
Welty and Walker Evans (1978) and Blues from the Delta
(1970). His films include Mississippi Blues (1983), which
was featured at the Cannes Film Festival. Among his sound
recordings are Highway 61 Blues: James 'Son' Thomas
(1983), Bothered All the Time (1983), Genesis: The
Beginnings of Rock (1974) and Blues from the Delta
(1970). He was a consultant to the 1985 movies The Color
Purple and Crossroads, the latter about blues music,
and for nearly a decade until 1994 he hosted Highway 61, a weekly
blues music program that airs on Mississippi Public Radio.
Among the cultural programs Dr. Ferris has established at
the Center for the Study of Southern Culture are the Oxford
Conference for the Book, the annual Faulkner and Yoknapatawpha
Conference, and conferences on Elvis Presley, civil rights and
the law, and civil rights and the media. The center also
sponsors seminars for teachers, educational tours of the South,
traveling exhibitions and musical performances. Drawing on the
world's largest blues archives at the University of Mississippi,
the center reaches wide audiences with its magazine Living
Blues. Research conducted at the center has resulted in a
wide range of audio recordings, films, scholarly papers and
books.
Dr. Ferris's honors include the presidentially bestowed
Charles Frankel Prize in the Humanities, the American Library
Association's Dartmouth Medal, the Mississippi Institute of Arts
and Letters Award, and France's Chevalier and Officer in the
Order of Arts and Letters. He has also been inducted into the
Blues Hall of Fame.
Before coming to the Center for the Study of Southern
Culture in 1979, Dr. Ferris taught at Yale University (1972-79)
and at Jackson State University in Mississippi (1970-72). He has
M.A. and Ph.D. degrees in folklore from the University of
Pennsylvania, an M.A. in English literature from Northwestern
University and a B.A. from Davidson College. Born in Vicksburg,
Miss., in 1942, Dr. Ferris is married to Marcie Cohen Ferris.
|