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Tony Lewis Retires.
After 30 years of dedicated teaching, research, and service at Louisiana State University, Dr. Anthony J. "Tony" Lewis retired at the end of the Spring 2008 semester. He was honored by friends, family, and colleagues at a party on May 2 in the French House on the LSU campus hosted by the Department of Geography and Anthropology.
Although he and his wife Barbara are moving to their new home in Idaho, Tony expects to return to Baton Rouge occasionally as he continues his remote sensing research projects.
Miles Richardson's book deemed "a stunning achievement" in JSH review.
Miles Richardson's book Being-in-Christ and Putting Death in Its Place: An Anthropologist's Account of Christian Performance in Spanish America and the American South (Louisiana State University Press, 2003) was reviewed in the Journal of Southern History, Vol. 73, No. 4, November 2007. An excerpt:
"This book is a stunning achievement, a mature study by a brilliant scholar who draws from ethnographic detail, historical understanding, philosophical questioning, and interdisciplinary theoretical sophistication. It is a work that should be seen as a premier text in any attempt to place the American South in relationship to other cultures. . . . .The sweep of this magisterial book includes architectural styles, theological justifications, and such popular religious experiences as pilgrimages to shrines and southern homecomings. Richardson's wide-ranging intelligence draws relevant quotations from Miguel de Unamuno, Jacques Derrida, and Hank Williams in this tour de force, an altogether original study." (Charles Reagan Wilson, University of Mississippi)
Graduate Student Wins McColl Family Fellowship
Russell Fielding, a doctoral student in the Department of Geography and Anthropology at Louisiana State University, will go to Newfoundland to research the pilot whale drive fisheries in the aftermath of their ban by the Canadian government. In his application for the fellowship, Fielding wrote, "It is my goal, as I mature in the field of geography, to produce at least one journalistic article for each academic article that I write. I fully embrace FOCUS on Geography's mission to publish work that is geographical in concept and jounalistic in style."
The McColl Family Fellowships, which were established in 1999, are endowed by Dr. Robert W. McColl and his wife, Suzanne Ecke McColl. The fellowship consists of round-trip airfare to any place in the world of the candidate’s choosing. The candidate must secure funding for other expenses from other sources. The only obligation of the Fellow is to write an article based on the visit abroad that is suitable for publication in FOCUS on Geography magazine and that is submitted to the editor within six months of returning from the trip.
LSU Attends SWAAG
LSU Geographers made a strong showing at the annual SWAAG meeting held in Bryan, Texas. Faculty and students presented papers, and Russell Fielding won second place in the Mid-South ASPRS student paper competition. Next's years meeting will be held in San Marcos, Texas, make plans to join us.
The LSU contingent is shown below passing through customs to enter the Republic of Texas.

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New Department Hires
LSU Department of Geography and Anthropology is pleased to announce the addition of three new faculty:
Fahui Wang joins us from Northern Illinois University. He will play a major role in LSU’s China Culture and Commerce initiative and will teach courses in Economic Geography, GIS, and Asia.
David Brown comes to LSU from the University of New Hampshire. His chief interests are in climate variability and global change.
Lei Wang recently received his Ph.D. from Texas A&M University. He brings expertise in quantitative methods, terrain and hydrological analysis, and remote sensing. |
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Miles Richardson Appointed Professor Emeritus
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Miles Richardson has been appointed Professor Emeritus in the Department of Geography & Anthropology. Miles retired from the Department this May after over forty years of dedicated teaching, distinguished research, and extraordinary service to LSU.
Miles is proud of being from Palestine, Texas. Although he never finished high school, he attended college after military service in the Korean War, and earned a B.S. at Stephen F. Austin State College in 1957. His PhD in Anthropology was granted in 1965, at Tulane University; his dissertation research was published as a monograph, San Pedro, Columbia; Small Town in a Developing Society, which continues in print, and is widely used in teaching ethnography and Latin American anthropology.
Miles is the editor of three books, and the author of three more, most recently his celebrated 2003 publication Being-in-Christ and Putting Death in Its Place: An Anthropologist's Account of Christian Performance in Spanish America and The American South, with LSU Press. He has published over fifty articles, some in Spanish, articulating his humanistic approach across all fields of anthropology; this range and depth of scholarly production is truly remarkable. Several of his papers, most notably “Being-in-the-Market versus Being-in-the-Plaza,” and “Anthropologist The Myth-Teller” have been reproduced in several anthologies. He has also published works of fiction and poetry.
He has been active in the American Anthropological Association, especially in the Society for Humanistic Anthropology; he edited the journal Anthropology and Humanism Quarterly from 1984-1990. He was a founding member of Southern Anthropological Society in 1965, and has served this organization in many capacities over the years, including as President. He is a longtime member of the Association of American Geographers, and frequently presents papers in that venue.
Before coming to LSU, Miles taught at Indiana State College of Pennsylvania, and over the years has been a Visiting Scholar at Princeton, the University of Texas Austin, and the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill. At LSU, Miles has taught thousands of students, and directed numerous MA Theses and Doctoral Dissertations. Two of the dissertations he directed won the LSU Distinguished Dissertation Award. These numbers cannot convey the devotion that Miles' students have for him; to say that he is beloved by his students is not exaggeration. Former students keep in touch, and eagerly seek him out at conferences. Current students respectfully attended the recent memorial service for Miles' daughter. Miles held the Fred B. Kniffen Chair from 1989-1997, and was awarded the Doris Z. Stone Professorship in 1997. In 2005, he received both the LSU 2005 Distinguished Faculty Award and the Brij Mohan Distinguished Professor Award.
His service to LSU includes diligent work on every Departmental Committee, many College and University Committees, terms on both the A&S College Senate and the Faculty Senate, and two stints at Department Chair. He has been President of the LSU Chapters of both Phi Kappa Phi and Sigma Xi.
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On May 12, a pool-side party was held at the home of Patrick Hesp and Graziela da Silva in honor of Miles. The standing room only crowd of Miles' colleagues, past and present students, and friends celebrated and reminisced about his many years in the department. Retired geography professor and former department chair Bill Davidson emceed the event, saying that in all his years in academia, he knew of no other professor who was so beloved by his students as Miles. The department presented Miles with a gift of original artwork (click here to view) created by Mary Lee Eggart, research associate in the Cartographic Section. The guests were then treated to Miles' rendition of "Your Cheatin' Heart," accompanied by Patrick Hesp on guitar. Although now retired, Miles will continue to subvert the dominant paradigm. |
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Endowed Professorships Announced
On May 31, 2007, the Dean of the College of Arts & Sciences announced the selection of
Jill Brody for the Fred B. Kniffen Professorship
Patrick Hesp for the Richard J. Russell Professorship,
Robert Tague for James J. Parsons Professorship.
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Department Newsletters
Latitudes, the
newsletter of the Department of Geography and Anthropology, is published at
least once a year and contains articles on events, faculty news, student
and alumni accomplishments, lab openings, special honors, or other items.
Correspondence relating to the newsletter
- such as news items, accomplishments, or changes of address - may be
sent to:
Latitudes
Department of Geography & Anthropology
Louisiana State University
Baton Rouge, LA 70803
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2007
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