Exploring the Nuances of History

Last weekend (April 5-6, 2024), I was invited to celebrate the 30/50 Anniversary Celebration hosted by The Center for the Study of the American South. With only a few weeks remaining of my internship at the Southern Oral History Program at UNC Chapel Hill, I could not have had a better way to begin to close out the year and reflect on my time as a student intern.

From working on the digitization of Southern Mix, to preserve the history of Asian Americans in the South, to currently researching for the “Rooms Unvisited” digital exhibit, I’ve been fortunate to receive training as an oral historian and explore the nuances of public history. I have been relearning how to interpret and interact with history by reverting to the roots of storytelling.

I have also been so inspired by the power of prioritizing ordinary stories and amplifying minority voices. And how these efforts challenge bureaucratic barriers and elitist biases in archives, helping us fill in historical gaps and promote epistemic equity. This experience has also emphasized the importance of climbing down from the ivory tower of academia to build long term partnerships with community partners to collaborate on projects and work together to bring fruitful changes to our community.

Despite only being in North Carolina for two years, the Center for the Study of the American South has really become a home for me and has been transformative in my formative years of college. I look forward to continuing my work in a field that is dedicated to reclaiming and rewriting narratives and helping us to reimagine our futures.

I also could not have accomplished this work without the support from the folks at CSAS and SOHP. Special thanks to my lovely classmates from the past two semesters, and to my incredible instructor, Hooper Schultz, and mentor, Sophie To, both of whom are doing transformative work in their fields that is reshaping the historical landscape in the South.

We are excited to share the good news that Dr. Marcie Cohen Ferris has been appointed interim director of the Center for the Study of the American South. Dr. Ferris is a valued member of our UNC campus community and longtime friend and supporter of the Center, having previously served as interim director, senior leadership advisor, and trusted colleague, as well as faculty editor of Southern Cultures for nearly a decade. Please join us in welcoming Dr. Ferris back in this capacity and read more about her work below. We’d also like to thank our previous director, Dr. Blair LM Kelley, who is the new president and director of the National Humanities Center. Congratulations, Dr. Kelley!

About Marcie Cohen Ferris

Born and raised in northeastern Arkansas, Ferris’s deep attachment to the study of place and the American South is rooted in her childhood. For more than forty years, she has studied, documented, interpreted, exhibited, taught, and written about the South, largely through its foodways, material culture, and the southern Jewish experience. She’s committed to fostering the creative economies of an evolving and vibrant region.

As a professor emeritus in the Department of American Studies at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Ferris is an editor for Southern Cultures, a quarterly journal of the history and cultures of the U.S. South, and a project of the Center for the Study of the American South (CSAS). Ferris served as CSAS interim director in 2022–2023, where she remains actively engaged in the Center’s work as well as teaching and scholarship. She was co-chair of UNC-Chapel Hill’s pan-university academic theme, FOOD FOR ALL: LOCAL AND GLOBAL PERSPECTIVES, 2015–2018. Under her leadership, a food studies minor was initiated at UNC-Chapel Hill in 2018. From 2006 to 2008, Ferris served as president of the board of directors of the Southern Foodways Alliance.

Ferris’s major publications include: The Edible South: The Power of Food and the Making of an American Region and Matzoh Ball Gumbo: Culinary Tales of the Jewish South, and the co-authored Jewish Roots in Southern Soil: A New History. Ferris is the editor of Edible North Carolina: A Journey Across a State of Flavor (UNC Press, 2022), an exploration of the contemporary food movement in North Carolina, including 20 essays, the photography of Baxter Miller, and 20 recipes.

Ferris lives in Chapel Hill with her husband, folklorist and Southern Studies scholar, Bill Ferris, wonderfully nearby family, and one and sometimes more Labrador Retrievers.

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Marcie Cohen Ferris Named Interim Director

Marcie Cohen Ferris Named Interim Director

We are excited to announce that Dr. Marcie Cohen Ferris has been appointed interim director of CSAS. Dr. Ferris is a valued member of our UNC community and longtime friend and supporter of the Center, having served as interim director, senior leadership advisor, and trusted colleague, as well as faculty editor of Southern Cultures for nearly a decade.

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HOME ISSUE of Southern Cultures Launch

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Thinking South, hosted by CSAS, extends a special thanks to Southern Cultures and the Stone Center for co-sponsoring this session with Kennedi Carter and Endia Beal.