| |
Undergraduate Education Overview, Mission, and Learning Outcomes

Courses Offered for the Upcoming Semester – Fall 2008 Courses

Current and Past Semester Courses – Spring 2008 Courses

Instructors

Undergraduate Certificate

Documentary Studies Courses and
Cross-Listed Courses

Lehman Brady Visiting Joint Chair Professor
in Documentary Studies and American Studies

Student Opportunities at CDS
Instructors
Kelly
Alexander
kellyalexander9@hotmail.com

Kelly Alexander is a writer based in Chapel Hill, North Carolina.
She is a consulting editor to Saveur
magazine and the author of numerous feature stories for that publication.
Her article “Hometown Appetites,” an homage to the great
American food writer Clementine Paddleford, won the James Beard
Journalism Award and will be the basis for a biography and cookbook
to be published by Penguin in fall 2007. Prior to joining Saveur,
Alexander worked as the restaurant editor of Microsoft’s New
York Sidewalk and as an assistant editor at Food
& Wine magazine. Her work has appeared in the New
York Times, the New York Times
Magazine, O: The Oprah Magazine, Newsweek, and many other
publications. Last year her story “Multicultural Meat,”
about the cross-cultural significance of brisket, was nominated
for a Bert Greene Award for Food Journalism from the International
Association of Culinary Professionals. Alexander is also a regular
contributor on the subject of food to the NPR program “The
State of Things,” which airs daily on WUNC, North Carolina
Public Radio. She is a graduate of Northwestern University, where
she studied journalism, creative writing, and anthropology.
Erin Avots
eea4@duke.edu
Erin Avots, the 2005-07 Teaching Fellow at the Center for Documentary
Studies, is a Ph.D. candidate in the Department of History at Duke.
She teaches Documentary Research Methods, which combines the methodologies
of historical research and documentary fieldwork. Past class topics
have included the Duke family and slavery, Spanish-speaking peoples
in North Carolina from 1500 to the present, and Duke-Durham town/gown
relations. She is currently working on her history dissertation,
titled "The Evolution of Race Slavery in Maritime North Carolina,
1650-1750."
John Biewen
jbiewen@duke.edu

During an eighteen-year career, American RadioWorks Correspondent-Producer
John Biewen has produced a large body of documentary work for NPR
and Public Radio International programs. He harvested onions with
migrant farm workers in south Texas, followed Navajo youth gangs
in Arizona, and documented the lives of ex-inmates in North Carolina.
He reported on Tokyo's changing youth culture and the practice of
euthanasia in Holland. In 1997–98, Biewen covered the Rocky
Mountain West as a staff reporter for NPR. His recent awards include
two Robert F. Kennedy Memorial Awards (2000, 2001), the Public Service
Award from the Third Coast International Audio Festival (2002),
and the Scripps Howard National Journalism Award (2002). Biewen
graduated from Gustavus Adolphus College in St. Peter, Minnesota,
with a degree in philosophy. In 1985–87 he lived and
taught in Osaka, Japan.
David Cline
dpcline@email.unc.edu

David Cline, currently the Walter A. Davis Fellow at the Southern Oral History Program, has an M.A. in U.S. history with a certificate in public history from the University of Massachusetts at Amherst (2003). He is the author of Creating Choice: A Community Responds to the Need for Birth Control and Abortion, 1961–1973 (Palgrave Macmillan, 2005), an edited collection of oral histories documenting pre-Roe v. Wade illegal abortion networks. (For more information about the book, see www.creatingchoice.com.) His public history projects have included work on a National Public Radio documentary on the Korean War in 2002-03 and a 2005 project to create roadside signage to document the Cherokee Trail of Tears. He was a recipient of the National Council on Public History's New Professional Award in 2004. In his doctoral thesis, Cline will explore the roles and legacies of the religious left in 20th century U.S. social change movements.

Wendy Ewald
wendyewald@aol.com
Wendy Ewald is director of Literacy
Through Photography, a program of the Center for Documentary
Studies that teaches elementary- and middle-school students to express
themselves through photography and writing. A senior research associate
at CDS, she has been involved in several special projects for teachers
and students in the Durham Public Schools. These include Black Self/White
Self and American Alphabets, which explore race and ethnicity in
America. Ewald has worked as a photographer, teacher, and documentary
writer for more than thirty years. She has had exhibitions in major
museums in the United States and in Europe. She has published seven
books and received many grants and fellowships, including a MacArthur
Fellowship in 1992. At CDS, Ewald teaches the course Literacy Through
Photography: Teaching Photography and Writing in Elementary and
Middle Schools; she also has been co-teaching a Duke/UNC course
on various approaches to documentary photography since Spring 2003.
Her book, I Wanna Take Me a Picture:
Teaching Photography and Writing to Children, was published
by CDS/Lyndhurst Books and Beacon
Press in 2001.
Alex Harris
aharris@duke.edu

Alex Harris, one of the founders of the Center for Documentary Studies,
has taught documentary photography and writing at Duke since 1975.
Among his books are River of Traps, a finalist for the
Pulitzer Prize in general nonfiction in 1991, and A New Life:
Stories and Photographs from the Suburban South. His current
work is about contemporary Cuba, aging in America, and the autobiographical
impulse in photography. Harris helped to launch the Humanitarian
Challenges Focus program at Duke and is currently teaching photographic
fieldwork courses related to humanitarian and policy issues. In
some courses, such as Advanced Documentary Photography, Harris emphasizes
the new digital technology to produce photographs. Harris co-directs
the Lewis Hine Documentary Fellows
Program, a year-long postgraduate fellowship program based at
the Center for Documentary Studies. Through the Hine Program recent
Duke graduates work with international humanitarian organizations
focused on marginalized children. All Hine Fellows complete an in-depth
documentary project to benefit the non-governmental organizations
and communities with which they work.
Alex Harris's work can be seen on the Web at http://alex-harris.com.
Gary Hawkins
chaircity@usa.net

Gary Hawkins was born and raised in Thomasville, North Carolina.
He attended the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, where
he majored in fine arts, and the University of Southern California,
where he majored in cinema. He joined the directing faculty at the
North Carolina School of the Arts, in the School of Filmmaking,
in 1991 and taught there until 1999. Hawkins has written and directed
six films. His second, The Rough South of Harry Crews, won an Emmy and the Corporation for Public Broadcasting’s
Gold Award in 1992. The Rough South of Larry Brown, the
latest in Hawkins’s on-going series about working-class Southern
authors, was picked by The Oxford American as one of Thirteen
Essential Southern Documentaries and was reviewed by Variety as
a “beautifully conceived documentary film.” The
Rough South of Larry Brown won Best Feature at the Savannah
Film & Video Festival, Best Feature at the Ohio Independent
Film Festival, and Best Documentary Feature at the Oxford Film Festival.
Hawkins’s screenplay DownTime was selected by The
Sundance Institute for the Writer’s Lab in the winter of 2000.
Presently Hawkins is adapting two novels into screenplays for Capricorn
Films.
Frank Hunter
platpal@earthlink.net

Frank Hunter was born in El Paso, Texas, and grew up in the desert
Southwest. He has an M.A. in communications from the University
of Colorado and an M.F.A. in photography from Ohio University, where
he was the John Cady Graduate Fellow in Fine Art. Hunter has taught
at the university level for more than twenty years. His interest
in photographic process includes the technical process of exposure
and development as well as the psychological and spiritual aspects
of creating photographic work. Hunter is best known for his landscape
photographs done in the nineteenth-century process known as platinum/palladium.
His recent work includes a commission done for the Federal Reserve
Bank documenting Midtown Atlanta at the turn of the millennium,
which was shown at the High Museum in Atlanta in 2003. His work
is represented in a number of public and private collections, including
the Speed Museum, the Denver Museum of Art, the High Museum, and
the Houston Museum of Fine Arts.
Katie Hyde
kahyde@duke.edu

Katie Hyde is the Durham schools program coordinator for Literacy
Through Photography, a program based at the Center for Documentary
Studies. In this capacity, she works closely with undergraduate
students, community volunteers, and teachers and students in the
Durham Public Schools. With Wendy Ewald she teaches a course on
Literacy Through Photography that deals with children’s self-expression
and with race and gender issues within education. She also teaches
a course called Sociology Through Photography, using documentary
photography as a tool to see the world through a sociological lens.
Hyde earned her doctorate in sociology at North Carolina State University.
She has explored how social inequalities are constructed, perpetuated,
and resisted through fieldwork and other research on recent Latino/a
immigration in North Carolina, women’s activism in Russia,
and girls’ education in rural Nepal.
Dante James
dante.james@duke.edu

Dante J. James is an award-winning independent filmmaker and artist-in-residence at Duke University. He recently completed a short dramatic film based on the work of Charles W. Chesnutt. Last fall James won an Emmy award for his work as series producer of the critically acclaimed PBS series Slavery and the Making of America; he received a total of three nominations. In 2003, he executive produced the PBS series This Far by Faith: African American Spiritual Journeys. Earlier in his career, James worked with and produced several films for his friend and mentor, the late renowned filmmaker Henry Hampton, founder of Blackside Films. James's next film, a performance documentary for the PBS series Great Performances, will be shot in Paris, France. The film will explore history's influence on the artistic evolution of jazz music in Paris from 1918 to the 1950s. James is a graduate and distinguished alumnus of Grand Valley State University in Grand Rapids, Michigan. He is also a graduate of Duke University's Master of Arts in Liberal Studies Program.
Nancy
Kalow
eneyekay@yahoo.com

Nancy Kalow is a folklorist and filmmaker who has taught at CDS
since 2000. She attended Harvard University (A.B.) and the University
of North Carolina at Chapel Hill (M.A.) and was a Rockefeller
Fellow at UNC's University Center for International Studies.
She has documented Southern traditional music and material culture,
Primitive Baptist preaching and visionary narratives in eastern
North Carolina, and the music and religious folklife of the Mexican
community in central North Carolina. Two of her video documentaries
are online: Sadobabies,
winner of a Gold Hugo at the Chicago Film Festival and the Special
Jury Trophy at the San Francisco Film Festival, and The
Losers Club. Her most recent video, The
Beginning of the End, was completed in 2006. She has served
as co-chair of the Full Frame Documentary Film Festival's Selection
Committee since 2003.
Barbara Lau
balau@duke.edu
Barbara Lau, Community Documentary Projects Director at the Center
for Documentary Studies, is a folklorist, curator, and radio producer.
At CDS, she coordinates collaborative work with the Southwest Central
Durham Quality of Life Project and oversees the Youth
Document Durham and Youth Noise Network projects. Two recent
exhibitions are based on her fieldwork with photographer Cedric
N. Chatterley in North Carolina’s Cambodian refugee communities.
To accompany these exhibitions, she authored an exhibit catalog
and co-authored an award-winning children’s book, Sokita
Celebrates the New Year: A Cambodian American Holiday. She
has an MA in folklore from the University of North Carolina at Chapel
Hill.
Spencie Love
sl1@duke.edu

After graduating from college Spencie Love worked as a journalist
for ten years before going on to complete a Ph.D. in American history
at Duke University in 1990. She is the author of One Blood:
The Death and Resurrection of Charles R. Drew, which focuses
on twentieth-century race relations and relies heavily on oral history.
Before she began teaching at CDS in 2001, she served as Acting and
Assistant Director of the Southern Oral History Program at the University
of North Carolina. She is currently working on two book projects.
One deals with family history, focusing on five generations of women,
and the other is a study of nonviolence built around the life and
teaching of the Rev. James M. Lawson, known as the “nonviolent
strategist” of the Civil Rights Movement. Love’s courses
include Memories of Home: Family Sagas, which offers students the
opportunity to conduct oral history interviews and archival and
photography research for their own writing projects.
John Moses
moses001@mc.duke.edu
John Moses is a primary care pediatrician at Duke University Medical
Center. While he was an undergraduate student at Duke, Moses took
a photography class from CDS faculty member Alex Harris. Before
attending medical school, he spent a year photographing the conditions
of migrant farmworkers in the Southeast. His current projects include
a book about primary care medicine and a book about children and
illness. His courses include Medicine and the Vision of Documentary
Photography, part of the Focus Program, and Children and the Experience
of Illness, in which students teach photography to children being
treated for illness and write about their experiences during the
semester. Of the class, he says, “It has become a way for
students to process their own issues with illness.” Moses
plans to continue developing other opportunities for undergraduates
to work with documentary studies and medicine.

Susie Post-Rust
susie@susiepostrust.com
Susie Post-Rust is a veteran magazine and newspaper photojournalist
who has spent the last two decades documenting the lives of people
in more than twenty countries. Her passion throughout her career
has been in-depth documentary projects that reveal small communities
and the people who live in them. For more than ten years she worked
for National Geographic magazine,
while also contributing to Life, U.S.
News & World Report, Newsweek, and the New
York Times, as well as nonprofit charity groups, including
World Vision, the North Carolina Food Bank, Food for the Hungry,
and Compassion International. She has an MA in journalism from the
University of Missouri at Columbia and a BSBA from the University
of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. In 1986 she was honored with the
prestigious Robert F. Kennedy Journalism Award for Coverage of the
Disadvantaged in recognition of her photographic essay Jerry:
A Troubled Mind, the story of one man’s battle with
Alzheimer’s Disease.
Tom Rankin
docstudies@duke.edu

Tom Rankin is director of the Center for Documentary Studies and
associate professor of the practice of art and documentary studies
at Duke University. A photographer, filmmaker, and folklorist, Rankin
has been documenting and interpreting American culture for more
than twenty years. Formerly associate professor of art and Southern
studies at the University of Mississippi and chair of the Art Department
at Delta State University, he was educated at Tufts University,
the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, and Georgia State
University. A native of Kentucky, he has curated a number of exhibitions
and published numerous articles and reviews on photography and Southern
culture. His photographs have been published widely in numerous
magazines, journals, and books, and he has exhibited throughout
the country. His books include Sacred Space: Photographs from
the Mississippi Delta (1993), which received the Mississippi
Institute of Arts and Letters Award for Photography; 'Deaf Maggie
Lee Sayre': Photographs of a River Life (1995); Faulkner's
World: The Photographs of Martin J. Dain (1997); and Local
Heroes Changing America: Indivisible (2000).
Margaret Sartor
msartor@duke.edu
Margaret Sartor is a photographer, writer, and editor whose past
projects include What Was True: The Photographs and Notebooks
of William Gedney and Gertrude Blom: Bearing Witness,
which was co-edited with Alex Harris. Her photographs are in many
permanent and private collections and have appeared in Aperture,
DoubleTake, Esquire, Harper’s, and The New Yorker, among other publications. At CDS, Sartor teaches the seminar American
Communities: A Photographic Approach. In this course, she explains, “Each student has the responsibility of defining his or her
own long-term photographic project, and the unpredictable variety
of subject matter creates a unique atmosphere—one of mutual
astonishment as well as education. But the idea this class embodies,
if any, is the importance of paying attention, of gaining an understanding
of the way people live by direct observation and experience.”
Currently, Sartor’s own work focuses on her family and childhood
home of Monroe, Louisiana.
Lisa Satterwhite
lisa.satterwhite@duke.edu

Lisa Satterwhite, an artist and a biologist, holds a B.A. in fine art and art history and an M.S. in zoology from the University of Tennessee and a Ph.D. in cell biology from Johns Hopkins University. A cancer research fellow at Princeton University, where she studied photography in the Program for Visual Arts, she is interested in ties to the land, human health, and social justice. Her current photographic work documents cultural erasure from unrestricted land development in the mountains and explores sense of place, intimacy, and stewardship of water. In her research she is creating new methods to assess whether agricultural pesticides cause birth defects in children of migrant workers.
Christopher
Sims
csims@duke.edu
Christopher Sims, who currently designs the CDS Web site, has coordinated
the exhibitions and awards programs at CDS, as well as worked as
a photo archivist at the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum in Washington,
DC. He has an undergraduate degree from Duke, a master’s degree
in visual communication from UNC–Chapel Hill, and is currently
a candidate for an M.F.A. in Studio Art at the Maryland Institute
College of Art. He has received a national fellowship from the Houston
Center for Photography, was selected for PDN’s
Photography Annual "Best Photography of the Year" in 2007,
and was featured in the book American
Photography 20, a collection edited by Kathy Ryan of the
New York Times Magazine.
Sam Stephenson
sfs4@duke.edu

Sam Stephenson is a writer and a research associate at the Center
for Documentary Studies. Since 1997 his research his focused on
the life and work of photographer W. Eugene Smith, and he has published
two books on the subject: Dream Street: W. Eugene Smith’s
Pittsburgh Project (W. W. Norton in association with the Center
for Documentary Studies, 2001) and W. Eugene Smith, a retrospective
of Smith’s career (Phaidon Press, 2001). He also curated a
national traveling exhibition of Smith’s Pittsburgh photographs
for the Carnegie Museum of Art in Pittsburgh. Stephenson
is currently directing a multifaceted project about a loft building
in Manhattan’s flower district that from 1954 to 1964 was
a legendary haunt of jazz musicians. Recipient of a 2001–02
National Endowment for the Humanities Fellowship, he is researching
Eugene Smith’s extensive photographs and audiotapes of this
jazz loft and collecting oral histories of the surviving musicians.
Stephenson, a native of Washington, N.C., has degrees from UNC-Chapel
Hill and Duke University. His teaching interests include visual
and narrative explorations of the built and natural environments
and documentary aspects of jazz history and music.
Kerry
Taylor
kerryt@email.unc.edu
Kerry Taylor is a native of Lombard, Illinois. He has taught a variety
of classes on oral history, the labor movement, and the civil rights
movement. Before returning to graduate school he worked as a newspaper
reporter, a community organizer, and an editor at the Martin Luther
King Jr. Papers Project at Stanford University. He is currently
working on his dissertation exploring labor activism in the 1970s.
Charlie Thompson
cdthomps@duke.edu

Charles Thompson, education and curriculum director at CDS, is an
adjunct faculty member in the Duke departments of cultural anthropology
and religion. He directs the undergraduate program at CDS. He holds
a Ph.D. in religious studies from UNC-Chapel Hill, with concentrations
in cultural studies, ethnography, and Latin American studies. His
particular interests in documentary work fall into the categories
of oral history, ethnography, and community activism. A former farmer,
he remains immersed in agricultural issues and the cultures that
surround our food system. He has written about farmworkers, and
he is an advisory board member of Student Action with Farmworkers.
His latest book, with Melinda Wiggins, is The Human Cost of
Food: Farmworker Lives, Labor, and Advocacy. Currently Thompson
is researching the history, culture, and agriculture of the Old
German Baptist Brethren in the mountains of Virginia. He has also
published a book and several articles on Guatemalan Maya refugees.
Timothy Tyson
timothy.tyson@duke.edu
Timothy B. Tyson, author of the much-acclaimed Blood
Done Sign My Name and other award-winning books, is a Senior
Research Scholar at the Center for Documentary Studies and Visiting
Professor of American Christianity and Southern Culture in the Divinity
School. Blood Done Sign My Name, a finalist for the National Book Critics Circle Award and winner
of the Christopher Award and the North Caroliniana Book Award, was
the 2005 selection of the Carolina Summer Reading Program at the
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, assigned to all new
undergraduate students. Tyson’s previous book Radio
Free Dixie: Robert F. Williams and the Roots of Black Power
(UNC Press, 1999) won the James Rawley Prize and was co-winner of
the Frederick Jackson Turner Prize, both from the Organization of
American Historians. He also co-edited, with David S. Cecelski,
Democracy Betrayed: The Wilmington
Race Riot of 1898 and Its Legacy (UNC Press, 1998), which
won the 1999 Outstanding Book Award from the Gustavus Myers Center
for the Study of Human Rights in North America. Tyson was a John
Hope Franklin Senior Fellow at the National Humanities Center in
2004–05. He is a North Carolina native and a graduate of Duke (M.A.
’91, Ph.D. ’94).

Jeff Whetstone
jeffwhet@email.unc.edu
Jeff Whetstone, a native of Chattanooga, Tennessee, has been photographing
and writing about the human relationship to the land since he graduated
from Duke University in 1990. In 1991, he traveled the migrant farmworker
stream throughout the southeastern United States and in the Rio
Grande Valley in Mexico to document the life of a migrant farmworker
family as part of a project at the Center for Documentary Studies.
A recipient of several Lyndhurst Foundation grants, Whetstone has
taught photography and writing workshops throughout the South, including
residencies at the Appalachian Media Institute and at Appalshop
Inc., a media arts center located in eastern Kentucky. While working
at Appalshop, Whetstone served as project director for the exhibit
Before the Flood, an oral history project documenting the
history of the Watuaga River Valley, which premiered at the National
Folk Festival. His photographs and writing have been featured in
Southern Changes, DoubleTake, Southern Exposure, and elsewhere.
After receiving his M.F.A. in photography from Yale in 2001, he
was awarded the prestigious Sakier Prize for photography. Whetstone,
a lecturer in the Art and Art History Department at the University
of North Carolina-Chapel Hill, exhibits his work at Wallspace Gallery
and Ariel Meyerowitz Gallery in New York City. He co-teaches a Duke/UNC
documentary photography class with Wendy Ewald.
Visiting Instructor
Rayna Green
Lehman Brady Visiting Joint Chair Professor
in Documentary Studies and American Studies at Duke University and
the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Rayna Green is a curator at the National Museum of American History, Smithsonian Institution, where she also serves as director of the American Indian Program and as documentary historian for the American Food and Wine History Project. A Cherokee who grew up in Oklahoma and Texas, she holds a Ph.D. in folklore and American studies from Indiana University. She has taught at several universities (e.g., Dartmouth College) and has served in public service institutions (e.g., the American Association for the Advancement of Science).
Green has written or edited four books and published many essays on American Indian representations, American Indian women, American identity, American Indian material culture, and American Indian food and foodways. She also writes short fiction and creative nonfiction. Several of her short stories and essays on Native women and American identity have been widely reprinted and have served as standard reading for twenty years in university courses throughout the country. Forthcoming in 2008 is her newest article on foodways, “Mother Corn Meets the Dixie Pig: Native Food in the Native South.”
She is also known for her curation of museum exhibitions throughout the country and for documentary video and audio production. She has played a primary role in the production of three documentary short films on Pueblo life and culture and in two pioneering audio recordings of Native women’s music. Her most recent video project – In the Kitchen With Julia, a documentary narrative with Julia Child – follows on her co-curation of the long-running popular exhibition Bon Appétit: Julia Child’s Kitchen at the Smithsonian.
top
banner image:
Untitled, from
the series Latino Pastimes—La
Vida y el Fútbol. Photograph by William L. Plaxico, from the course "Documentary Photography
and the Southern Cultural Landscape," taught by Professor Tom
Rankin. |
|