College of Arts & Sciences home AppalNET Search ASU's Website ASU Calendar of Events Campus and community Maps Technology Resources and Help ASU Home Page
  Department of Interdisciplinary Studies - Appalachian Studies

HOME

Students
Scholarships
Degree Programs
Class Schedule
Graduate School
Available Positions

Faculty/Staff
Biographies

Vitae
Publications

Doc Watson Endowment

Research

Grants


Forms

Resources

Alumni

News

Events

Links

Visitors

Site Map

Department Calendar
 
Contact Info

Center for Appalachian Studies
Living Learning Center
Academic Bldg.
305 Bodenheimer Dr.
PO Box 32018
Boone, NC 28608-2018
(828) 262-4089
FAX: (828) 262-7715

Center Director
Dr. Patricia Beaver
beaverpd@appstate.edu
Room 110

Program Director
Dr. Edwin Arnold
arnoldet@appstate.edu
Room 108


Administrative Assistant
Debbie Bauer
bauerdk@appstate.edu
Room 109

 

FACULTY/STAFF BIOGRAPHIES

Patricia D. Beaver / Deborah K. Bauer / Edwin T. Arnold / Sandra L. Ballard / Gary Boye / Jefferson C. Boyer / Jana Carp / Cecelia Conway / Christoffel den Biggelaar / James Goff / David Haney / Fred J. Hay / Susan E. Keefe / Thomas A. McGowan / Brad Nash / Elaine O'Quinn / Conrad Ostwalt / Lynn Moss Sanders / Timothy Silver / Chuck Smith / Neva J. Specht / Gary L. Walker / Charles Alan Watkins / Thomas R. Whyte / Wayne Williams

Director:

Patricia BeaverPatricia D. Beaver (Ph.D. 1976, Duke University) Professor of Anthropology and Director of the Center for Appalachian Studies at Appalachian State University. She has conducted research in Appalachia and China, with particular interests in community, family, and public policy as well as issues related to gender, class, and ethnicity. She has taught courses in the Anthropology Department, many of which overlap with Appalachian Studies, Asian Studies and Women's Studies. She was project director of the Appalachian Land Ownership Study (discussed in Who Owns Appalachia, University Press of Kentucky 1983), co-editor with Burton Purrington of Cultural Adaptions to Mountain Environments (University of Georgia Press, 1984), author of Rural Community in the Appalachian South (Waveland, 1996), co-editor with Carol Hill of Cultural Diversity in the US South (forthcoming 1998, University of Georgia Press). Her recent research focuses on cultural and ethnic diversity in Appalachia, with attention to the African American and Jewish communities in Asheville, N.C., on Melungeon history and identity, and on rehistoricizing gender and ethnicity. Curriculum Vita

Staff:Debbie Bauer


Deborah K. Bauer, (B.A. English, minor Geology, 2005, Appalachian State University), Administrative Assistant. Debbie lives in Vilas with her husband Michael. They are currently building a new home. She loves to cook, dabble in pottery, tiles and mosaics, read and garden.

 

Faculty Associates:

Edwin T. Arnold (Ph.D., University of South Carolina) Center for Appalachian Studies Program Director and Professor of English. Former associate editor of the Appalachian Journal and co-editor with J.W. Williamson of Interviewing Appalachia: The Appalachian Journal Interviews, 1978-1992. Among his other books are Conversations with Erskine Caldwell, Perspectives on Cormac McCarthy, Reading Faulkner: Sanctuary, and A Cormac McCarthy Reader: The Border Trilogy. He is also editor of special issues of The Southern Quarterly on Southern Head Trips: The South and the Sixties Counterculture and an issue devoted to Ozark writer Donald Harington. www.english.appstate.edu/arnold.htm

Sandra L. Ballard (Ph.D., University of Tennessee), Professor of English and Editor, Appalachian Journal -- an interdisciplinary, scholarly, quarterly publication documenting and exploring the history, politics, economics, culture, folklore, literature, music, and ecology of the Appalachian mountain region. She is Professor of English at Appalachian State University, where she occasionally teaches a course in Appalachian literature. She is co-editor of the The Collected Short Stories of Harriette Simpson Arnow (Michigan State University Press). With Patricia Hudson, she co-edited the literary anthology Listen Here: Women Writing in Appalachia (University Press of Kentucky) and co-authored The Carolinas and Appalachian States in the Smithsonian Guide to Historic America series. She is writing a biography of Harriette Simpson Arnow, arguably the best novelist from Southern Appalachia in the 20th century.

Gary Boye (Ph.D., Duke University 1995, M.S.L.S. University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill 2000) Assistant Professor and Music Librarian of the Erneston Music Library (http://www.library.appstate.edu/music) at Appalachian State University.  He teaches the music bibliography course for graduate students in the Hayes School of Music, as well as courses in guitar literature and country music.  Research interests include the Baroque guitar, including a dissertation, " Giovanni Battista Granata and the Development of Printed Guitar Music in Seventeenth-Century Italy" (Duke U., 1995) completed with the help of a Fulbright Scholarship for a year of research in Italy.  Other research interests include country music, bluegrass music, and the five-string banjo.  He has articles published in the New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians (London: Macmillan, 2001), the  Journal of Seventeenth-Century Music , North Carolina Libraries, Lute Society Quarterly, as well as several other publications and Web pages.  He plays classical and steel-string guitars, Baroque guitar, five-string banjo, lute, and other plucked-string instruments.

Jefferson C. Boyer (Ph.D., University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill) Associate Professor of Anthropology.  Scholarly interests include Latin America and Appalachian sustainable development. www.anthro.appstate.edu/faculty.htm

Jana Carp (Ph.D., University of Illinois at Chicago) Adjunct Assistant Professor of Geography and Planning.

Cecelia Conway (Ph.D., University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill) Professor of English and Folklore.  Her scholarly interests include the banjo, fiddle and other music traditions, women and literature in the South and Appalachian literature.  She recently published African Banjo Echos in Appalachia (1995, University of Tennessee Press) and co-produced the Smithsonian CD, Black Banjo Songsters of NC and VA. Atlantic Monthly considered her book a "landmark study" and the CD a "rare collection" of music. She is currently working on a second CD, Black Banjo Songsters of the Blue Ridge, for Smithsonian Folkways.

Christoffel den Biggelaar (Ph.D., Michigan State University) Associate Professor of Interdisciplinary Studies

James Goff, Professor of History.

David Haney (Ph.D., State University of New York at Buffalo) Associate Vice Chancellor for Academic Affairs and Professor, Department of English. He has been a bluegrass performer since 1976, playing guitar and mandolin and singing lead and tenor. He recorded two albums on Rounder Records with Joe Val and the New England Bluegrass Boys in the 1980s, and he has recently recorded with Lisa Baldwin and with the Dirt Road bluegrass band. He has contributed articles to Bluegrass Unlimited and other music periodicals. He has also written two books and numerous articles on British Romantic poetry.

Fred J. Hay (Ph. D. 1985, University of Florida, M.L.I.S 1987, Florida State University) Professor and Librarian of the W.L. Eury Appalachian Collection at Appalachian State University. He teaches one of the required courses for the Appalachian Studies program, AS 5000, Bibliography and Research. His publications include African American Community Community Studies From North America (1989), "Goin' Back to Sweet Memphis":  Conversations with the Blues (2001), and "From Activist to Academic:  An Evolutionary Model for the Bibliography of Appalachian Studies" ( Journal of Appalachian Studies , 1997).  Hay edited When Night Falls, Kric! Krac!: Haitian Folktales (1999), three issues of the Black Music Research Journal (2005) devoted to Appalachia, and co-edited Documenting Cultural Diversity in the Resurgent American South (1997) which was awarded the American Folklore Society's Brenda McCallum Memorial Prize.His scholarly interests include African Appalachia, ethnography, documentation and bibliography, and folklore.

Susan E. Keefe (Ph.D. University of California, Santa Barbara) Professor of Anthropology. She has taught "Appalachian Culture," "Qualitative Methods," and "Ethnographic Field School" in the Appalachian Studies program. She also regularly supervises internships for graduate and undergraduate students in the Appalachian region. She serves on the Graduate Program Advisory Committee for the Center for Appalachian Studies and the Sustainable Development Program. She recently served on the Steering Committee of the Appalachian Studies Association and was the 1998 Conference Program Chair. In 1998 she also served as President of the Southern Anthropology Society. Her research interests include ethnicity, social organization and medical and applied anthropology. She edited Appalachian Mental Health (University of Kentucky Press, 1988) and is currently editing another volume tentatively titled Culturally-Relevant Practice in Appalachia.

Thomas A. McGowan (Ph.D., University of Virginia) Professor of English. He has received the Trustees' Award for Excellence in Teaching and was designated Outstanding Teacher of the College of Arts and Sciences in 1996. His research interests include regional folklife and oral narrative. He served as editor of the North Carolina Folklore Journal for twenty years and also as associate editor of the Appalachian Journal. The North Carolina Folklore Society has presented him its Brown-Hudson Folklore Award and, in 2001, named its service award after him. He has edited Assessing Appalachian Studies; Wiseman's View: The Autobiography of Skyland Scotty Wiseman; and A Treasury of Tar Heel Folk Artists: The North Carolina Folk Heritage Award 1989-1996. He is the co-producer of the compact disc/cassette tape Orville Hicks: Mule Egg Seller and Appalachian Storyteller, which received the Paul Green Media Award of the N.C. Society of Historians. McGowan is also a speaker in the N.C. Humanities Council's Humanities Forum.

Brad Nash, Assistant Professor of Sociology.

Elaine O'Quinn, Associate Professor of English.

Conrad Ostwalt (Ph.D., Duke University, 1987) Chairperson and Professor of Philosophy and Religion. His publications include "Love Valley: An American Utopia," Bowling Green State University Popular Press, 1998.  "Witches and Jesus: Lee Smith's Appalachian Religious Consciousness," forthcoming, "The Salem School: White Missionaries/Black School" in Appalachian Journal, and "Crossing of Cultures: The Mennonite Brethren of Boone, N.C. " in the Journal of the Appalachian Studies Association. His scholarly intererests include American and Appalachian religious traditions. He teaches P&R 5400, Religion in Appalachia.

Lynn Moss Sanders (Ph.D., University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill) Professor of English

Timothy Silver (Ph.D., College of William and Mary) Professor of History

Chuck Smith (ABD, Virginia Tech) Director of Sustainable Development, Lecturer, Interdisciplinary Studies

Neva J. Specht (Ph.D., University of Delaware) Associate Professor of History

Bruce Stewart (Ph.D. University of Georgia) History

Gary L. Walker (Ph.D., University of Tennessee, Knoxville) Professor of Biology

Charles Alan Watkins (Ph.D., University of Delaware 1982) is the Director of the Appalachian Cultural Museum and Adjunct Associate Professor of History. he has published articles in various publications including Curator, Appalachian Journal, and Now and Then. His scholarly interests include material culture, art history and photography.

Thomas R. Whyte (Ph. D., University of Tennessee, 1988) Associate Professor of Anthropology. His scholarly interests include prehistory of the Southern Appalachian Region and public archaeology. He has many publications in such journals as Southeastern Archaeology and Journal of Middle Atlantic Archaeology along with many technical reports. He was also involved in The Time Tunnel: A Living History of Human Prehistory.

Wayne Williams ( Ph.D., Texam A&M University) Professor of Health, Leisure and Exercise Science

back to top

 

 

 

Last Updated Thursday, April 24, 2008 3:40 PM
This site is maintained by Debbie Bauer for Appalachian Studies

Copyright © 2005 • College of Arts & Sciences

Design Approved: Valid HTML 4.01!    Valid CSS!    Approved 508
If you have any questions or issues regarding the accessibility of these pages, please contact vangildertm@appstate.edu