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Anthropologist
Carol Stack Will Speak March 6 & 7
For
release: Mar. 3, 2003
For press information, contact
Gabrielle Maxey
Anthropologist
and educator Dr. Carol Stack will visit The University of
Memphis this week for a series of lectures on gender, race,
ethnicity and economic hardship. All her talks are free and
open to the public.
Stack
will explore "Coming of Age at Minimum Wage" at
5 p.m. Thursday, March 6, in Manning Hall Room 201. The talk,
part of the Charles H. McNutt Speaker Series, will examine
Stack's recent ethnographic research among urban adolescents
and their efforts to respond to limited circumstances.
She
will discuss her award-winning book, Call to Home: African
Americans Reclaim the Rural South, at 7 p.m. Friday, March
7, in Johnson Hall Room 110. The book chronicles the reverse
migration of African-Americans from rust belt cities to the
South, where they have family ties. Call to Home won
the Victor Turner Award form the Society for Humanistic Anthropology.
Stack
is a professor of education and women's studies at the University
of California at Berkeley. She uses an anthropological perspective
to conduct research on urban youth, migration, rural and urban
families, service-sector employment, and other facets of the
social context of education.
Stack
has served as chair of the women's studies program and chancellor's
assistant on the status of women at Berkeley. She has been
a Guggenheim Fellow, a Fellow of Stanford University's Center
for Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences, and a Fellow
at the Russell Sage Foundation.
For
more information, contact Jane Henrici at jhenrici@memphis.edu
or 901-678-5472, or call the Department of Anthropology at
901-678-2080.
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