May 19, 2012

Today-MSNBC: Is This Scribbled Signature the Work of Shakespeare?

Researchers using high-tech photography have reconstructed a signature that may belong to William Shakespeare — or perhaps a clever forger. It may never be clear, said Gregory Heyworth, a professor of English at the University of Mississippi. Read the story:

LiveScience: Restored Scribble May Be Shakespeare’s Signature

Researchers using high-tech photography have reconstructed a signature that may belong to William Shakespeare — or perhaps a clever forger. It may never be clear, said Gregory Heyworth, a professor of English at the University of Mississippi. Read the story

Ecocritic to Discuss Shakespeare Standard April 3

OXFORD, Miss. – Noted scholar Robert Watson gives the 40th annual James Edwin Savage Lecture in the Renaissance April 3 at the University of Mississippi. His lecture, “Eco vs. Ego in Shakespeare’s ‘Midsummer Night’s Dream,’” is a free, public event at 7 p.m. in Bondurant Auditorium. “Professor Watson is an accomplished Renaissance scholar who will be discussing ‘A Midsummer Night’s Dream,’ a Shakespeare play we’ve all read, in the context of the relatively new field of ecocriticism,” said Ivo Kamps, chair of the English department. “The lecture should be of great interest to faculty and students in English, history and environmental studies.” Ecocriticism is the study of literature and environment from an interdisciplinary point of view where all sciences come together to analyze the environment and brainstorm possible solutions for the correction of the contemporary environmental situation. Watson is a professor of English at the University of California at Los Angeles. He earned a bachelor’s degree from Yale and a Ph.D. from Stanford University before serving on the faculty of Harvard University from 1980 to 1986. He joined the UCLA faculty in 1986 and held positions as chair of the English department, chair of the faculty of the College of Letters and Science, and vice provost for education innovation. He was named distinguished professor of English in 2008. Watson has published “Shakespeare and the Hazards of Ambition,” which received the Thomas J. Wilson Prize for Best First Book of the Year in 1984, “Ben Jonson’s Parodic Strategy: Literary Imperialism in the Comedies” and “The Rest is Silence: Death as Annihilation in the English Renaissance,” as well as three editions of plays by Ben Jonson. Watson has also published more than 20 articles and a number of poems. He is the recipient of a Guggenheim Foundation Senior Research Fellowship, an NEH Fellowship and multiple teaching awards. His most recent book is “Back to Nature: The Green and the Real in the Late Renaissance,” which won the 2007 prize for the best work of ecocriticism from the Association for the Study of Literature and the Environment, as well as the 2007 Elizabeth Dietz Memorial Prize for the year’s best book in Renaissance and early modern studies. “We are very fortunate to have Professor Watson here, especially since the university has a fledgling environmental studies program, and a community that is concerned with how to integrate issues regarding the environment into all of our practices as students, teachers, thinkers, activists and Mississippians,” said Karen Raber, UM professor of English. “His talk on ‘A Midsummer Night’s Dream’ will not just elucidate the play, but will make its concerns relevant to our own historical and political moment; he touches on advances in medicine and science to suggest how much like our own newly evolving picture of life’s complexity and interdependence is prefigured in Shakespeare’s work.” The late James Edwin Savage chaired UM’s English department from 1954 to 1961 and was a member of the university’s Studies in English editorial board from 1960 to 1972. After relinquishing the chair, he continued to teach courses in Renaissance drama and literary criticism until his death. For more information or assistance related to a disability, call 662-915-7439. For more information on the Department of English, go to http://english.olemiss.edu/.

Image May Show Shakespeare’s Legal Side

OXFORD, Miss. – Before William Shakespeare created such literary and stage classics as “Macbeth” and “Romeo and Juliet,” the legendary playwright may have labored over property deeds and other mundane legal documents. Did Shakespeare work as an attorney before achieving immortality at the Globe Theatre?That’s one of the theories a University of Mississippi professor speculated on this week after he and three of his students compared a known signature by the Bard of Avon with another signature on the title page of “Archaionomia,” a well-known legal treatise housed at Folger Shakespeare Library in Washington, D.C. Gregory Heyworth accompanied UM seniors Andrew Henning of Batesville, Mitchell Hobbs of Madison and Kristen Vise of Jackson, all students in the Sally McDonnell Barksdale Honors College, to the nation’s capitol, where they spent their spring break studying the Folger documents. Using state-of-the-art digital imaging equipment, the Ole Miss team verified that the previously unknown signature is indeed from the same 17th century period as the playwright. “We’ve gotten some clear results on the signature after image rendering earlier,” said Heyworth, associate professor of English and director of the Lazarus Project. “The clarity is significantly better than previous attempts. If it isn’t Shakespeare, it is at least a good forgery by someone who has seen Shakespeare’s signature firsthand.” The imaging system uses a 50-megapixel camera and multispectral lights to photograph and analyze rare and aged documents. The previously barely legible signature was made visible after it was photographed under 12 different wavelengths of light and rendered using software traditionally used by geospatial scientists and the CIA. Once the team had the best possible photo, they superimposed it upon an authentic Shakespeare signature for comparison. “Whether this is Shakespeare’s signature is something that we will not be able to determine for certain, perhaps ever, but we will have far better and more compelling data on which to make an adjudication,” Heyworth said. Heather Wolfe, curator of manuscripts at Folger, said the facility is grateful to Heyworth, his students and the university for bringing their technology to the Folger collection. “We won’t be able to verify that this is William Shakespeare’s signature,” Wolfe said. “But we may be able to determine that it was written in Shakespeare’s lifetime, by someone named William Shakespeare. There were multiple people with that name. “The spectral fingerprint may indicate that it belongs to a forger, like William Henry Ireland in the 1790s. We are most excited about the possibility of using the technology to allow us to decipher the names of the spectral hundreds of 16th- and 17th-century former owners written on title pages, and subsequently crossed-out by later owners.” The seniors were equally enthusiastic and excited about even the possibility of a discovery. Click the image to enlarge “While working on a senior honors thesis with Dr. Karen Raber on guilt and innocence in three of Shakespeare’s plays, I came across an old book on the subject where I found the lead on the Shakespeare signature at the Folger,” said Henning, an English major with a minor in mathematics. “The positive comparisons are phenomenal. For one, it suggests that, at the very least, Shakespeare possessed and was actively reading legal texts. Some might even argue that it draws a strong line indicating that Shakespeare was in some way involved in the English legal system.” After graduation, Henning plans to attend graduate school at King’s College in London. “I’ll be getting my degree in a field called digital humanities, where I’d like to focus on the very specialized area of manuscript recovery and restoration,” Henning said. “King’s College has the most established program in this area, so I’m elated that, through Dr. Heyworth’s help, I was able to get accepted. I intend to get my doctorate in the area as well.” Students learn to use the cutting-edge technology in the project-based course “Image, Text and Technology” that Heyworth teaches at UM. “Usually, my coursework doesn’t extend beyond the classroom, so to be involved in helping solve a question that’s bothered the Shakespeare community for much of the 20th century, I’m grateful and thrilled to be a part of such a process,” Hobbs said. The English major said he plans to attend the UM Medical Center in the fall. A studio art/graphic design major, Vise has assisted Heyworth on other digital imaging projects. While each has been thrilling, she said the Shakespeare signature verification is especially rewarding. “The match would provide evidence for the usefulness and possibilities of multispectral imaging and the cross-disciplinary nature of the field,” Vise said. “I want to work in a multidisciplinary field where overlap and collaboration are utilized to generate innovative solutions.” Another means of verifying the signature lies in the spectral “fingerprint” of the ink. “Every ink refracts light differently and uniquely,” Heyworth said. “Perhaps in the coming weeks, we will be able to compare the spectral fingerprint of this signature with other known and suspected Shakespeare signatures.” Though once a lengthy process, this endeavor took less time than previous ones, thanks in part to the new equipment purchased by the Honors College for the Lazarus Project, Heyworth said. “I want to thank Douglass Sullivan-Gonzalez for providing us with such incredibly powerful tools,” he said. Sullivan-Gonzalez, dean of the Honors College, said he is more than glad to support Heyworth and his students in such worthwhile scholarly research efforts. “The Lazarus project makes the experience of learning come alive,” he said. “A great professor engages undergraduate students to take their spring break and make a difference in the world of the academy. These students get a chance to see the past come alive in order to ask the right question about future research.” The mission of the Lazarus Project is threefold: to facilitate manuscript recovery by providing researchers with access to multispectral technology, to train students and textual scholars in the use of multispectral technology and image rendering and in the scientific disciplines of the new codicology, and to collect data and metadata on damaged manuscripts as a basis for subsequent scholarship. Since its inception, the project has analyzed several documents, including the Skipwith Revolutionary War Letters, which were donated to Ole Miss by Kate Skipwith and Mary Skipwith Buie, Gen. Nathanael Greene’s great-granddaughters; and the Wynn Faulkner Poetry Collection, 48 pages of early poetry written by William Faulkner between 1917 and 1925 that were donated by Leila Clark Wynn and Douglas C. Wynn. They were damaged and partly illegible, but honors students worked with multispectral imaging technology to recover several new poems. Previously, Heyworth and another team of UM students used the lab to help restore “Les Eschéz d’Amours” (The Chess of Love), a long, 14th century Middle French poem. The unique medieval manuscript, damaged in a World War II attack, was believed too badly damaged to be recovered before Heyworth and Daniel O’Sullivan, associate professor of modern languages, began working on it under UV light seven years ago. In 2009, Heyworth and his students used the portable lab to photograph the most damaged portions of the text under light of various wavelengths. That analysis is ongoing. Heyworth and his team are planning more projects, including a summer trip to Tbilisi, Georgia, to recover of some of the earliest copies of the Gospels and another to Milan, Italy, to help with the earliest manuscript of the “Book of Jubilees.” Heyworth and Susan Glisson, executive director of the university’s William Winter Institute for Racial Reconciliation, also submitted a proposal to the National Endowment for the Humanities for funds to establish a national civil and human rights archive at UM. Click here for more information about the Lazarus Project.  

Conference for the Book Celebrates Memoir and Biography Writing

Event set for March 22-24, preceded by Delta Literary Tour March 18-21 OXFORD, Miss. – Memoir, publishing and online writing will be examined at the 19th annual Oxford Conference of the Book, set for March 22-24. The 2012 conference opens with a lunch and lecture on the history of the book in the United States by scholar David D. Hall. That afternoon, Beth Ann Fennelly, associate professor of English and director of the MFA program at the University of Mississippi, will host a celebration of National Poetry Month. Immediately following will be a Writers Conversation between author Richard Ford and Josh Weil, the university’s John and Renée Grisham Writer in Residence. A special “Thacker Mountain Radio” show at Off Square Books, 160 Courthouse Square, will feature author and musician Bobby Keys with Charlie Winton at 6 p.m. “The unique things about the Oxford Conference for the Book are how it offers discussions on so many aspects of literature and literacy, and also how it treats all authors and speakers equally, without big sessions for big-name authors and little rooms for the rest of us,” said Ted Ownby, director of the UM Center for the Study of Southern Culture. “This year will be special in lots of ways, including the emphasis several panels have on writing memoir and biography.” Each year, two Friday morning sessions are devoted to educational programming and the celebration of literature for young people. All Oxford-area fifth- and ninth-grade students (nearly 1,000 readers) receive their own copies of books by the visitors and go to the conference to hear the authors speak about writing and reading. Elise Broach will discuss her book “Masterpiece” (Square Fish, 2010) with fifth-graders, and James Dashner will speak to ninth-graders about “The Maze Runner” (Delacorte Books, 2009). Saturday panels include commentary on the future of reading and literacy, followed by a panel on “The Urge Toward Memoir,” which will be moderated by Bill Dunlap and include Randy Fertel, Julia Reed and Norma Watkins. Blogging, online publishing and food writing will also be discussed that afternoon. “We are so excited to build on the conference’s long legacy of bringing book-lovers to Oxford, said Becca Walton, associate director of projects at CSSC. The conference will come to a close with an afternoon panel on the future of publishing, followed by a reading moderated by Tom Franklin including Michael Downs and Jennifer Dubois. There will also be a special announcement announcing the creation of an endowment to support the OCB in honor of Ann Abadie, associate director emerita of the CSSC, on her retirement this year. “So far that endowment has over $125,000 and it will help secure the conference for the future,” Ownby said. The Mississippi Delta Literary Tour, set for March 18–21, will once again traverse the Delta countryside, exploring the region’s rich literary, culinary and musical heritage. The tour will be based at the Alluvian Hotel in downtown Greenwood and will explore the towns of Clarksdale, Greenville, Indianola and Cleveland, making stops along the way in Money, Tutwiler and Winterville. This year promises to be the best tour yet, said Jimmy Thomas, CSSC associate director of publications. “We’re visiting a number of new places and people, including the Cotesworth Cultural and Heritage Center in North Carrollton and Carolyn Norris’s Art Shop in Cleveland, and in Greenwood we’ll have what promises to be a stimulating panel conversation on themes found in Kathryn Stockett’s book, ‘The Help,’” said Thomas, who leads the tour. “I’m kind of blown away by all the great artists and scholars who are joining us to help guide this tour across Mississippi’s most storied region.” The university and Square Books sponsor the conference in association with the Junior Auxiliary of Oxford, Lafayette County and Oxford Public Library, Lafayette County Literacy Council, LOFT: Lafayette/Oxford Foundation for Tomorrow, Mississippi Hills Heritage Area Alliance and Southern Literary Trail. The 2012 conference is partially funded by UM, a contribution from the R&B Feder Foundation for the Beaux Arts and grants from the National Endowment for the Arts, the Mississippi Arts Commission, the Mississippi Humanities Council, the Oxford Tourism Council and the Yoknapatawpha Arts Council. A full list of conference events is at http://www.conferenceforthebook.tumblr.com

Fundraiser to Benefit Tim Ford Scholarship March 21

OXFORD, Miss. – A reception honoring Tim Ford, former speaker of the Mississippi House of Representatives, is set for 5-6 p.m. March 21 at Balch & Bingham law firm in Jackson. The reception also supports a scholarship in Ford’s name at the University of Mississippi, where he was awarded the 2011 Distinguished Alumni Award in Public Service. “We are proud to recognize Tim Ford,” said Richard Forgette, senior associate dean of the UM College of Liberal Arts. “Tim has had a long, distinguished career in state government. He served as speaker of the Mississippi House for 16 years. “Tim is greatly respected on both sides of the aisle, Republican and Democrat. His public service has made a great difference, not only in terms of his community, but to the state of Mississippi and the University of Mississippi.” Ford earned a bachelor’s degree in 1973 and a J.D. in 1977, both from UM. After obtaining his law degree, he served as a law clerk for the presiding justice of the Mississippi Supreme Court and then as an assistant district attorney. He was elected to the state House of Representatives in 1980 and became speaker of the house in 1988, serving in that role until his retirement in 2004. He is the second-longest-serving speaker in Mississippi history. “Tim deserves this award because of his long-time tenure as a leader in Mississippi politics and his undying support for the University of Mississippi,” said Andy Mullins, chief of staff to the chancellor and associate professor of education. “So much of the good change that has occurred at this university has come through the support of people like Tim Ford. “He has been a friend to the university and a friend to those of us in the administration who have advocated for various changes to make the university a more international university rather than just a regional one.” During his tenure as speaker, Ford was known for his ability to hold the House together, despite partisanship pressures and a newly diverse chamber. He was recognized as a powerful leader who left the Legislature stronger than when he arrived. He is the first House speaker in the nation to receive the William M. Bulger Excellence in State Legislative Leadership Award. The honor is conferred every other year on a state legislative leader who has helped preserve and build public trust in the legislature and whose career embodies the principles of leadership. Ford was also given the Mississippi Supreme Court Chief Justice Award in 2003. He is a partner with Balch & Bingham LLP and serves as general counsel to the Mississippi Home Corp., the Mississippi Business Finance Corp., the Mississippi Development Bank and Momentum Mississippi. Ford credits the university for helping him in his career. “At Ole Miss you meet the future leaders of the state,” he said. “The friends and contacts that you make at Ole Miss will determine how successful you are in your future because you are literally going to meet everyone who runs the state.” Balch & Bingham recently made a pledge to the political science department. This donation will create a scholarship designed to allow students to participate in a legislative internship. “The Tim Ford Public Service Scholarship will help University of Mississippi undergraduates learn about their state and about the state Legislature, a befitting recognition of Tim Ford’s career,” Forgette said. “This scholarship, once endowed, will contribute to the academic experience of future undergraduates at the university.” The scholarship also allows the political science department to improve its curriculum, he said. “As part of this state legislative internship program, we created a service learning class piloted last fall in which students role-played as state legislators,” Forgette said. “A series of state senators spoke to students about issues facing the state of Mississippi. From that experience, we selected legislative interns. So this is not only recognition of Tim and his career, but this is how we are changing and improving our curriculum.” Ford said he hopes the internship will provide insight into the inner workings of the legislative process. “I hope that the internship will help students better understand how the state Legislature works,” he said. “It is a complex set of rules and committee work that – I’ll be honest – before I went, I had no idea how it operated. It is difficult to teach it in a classroom setting without the exposure that the internship will provide.” Click here for more information about the Department of Political Science.  

APA: UM Team Studies Mental Health Effects of Oil Spill

Stefan Schulenberg, PhD, an associate psychology professor at the University of Mississippi, and a team of graduate students have been charged with assessing how well the Mississippi Department of Mental Health Oil Spill Recovery–Behavioral Health Grant Program is meeting the mental health needs of people on the Mississippi coast. Read the story

Spring Environmental Film Series Kicks Off

The University of Mississippi Environmental Studies program and UM Media and Documentary Projects present two films on environmental issues as part of their spring film series. GasLand, an Oscar-nominated film focusing on the largest domestic natural gas drilling boom in history, will be shown Wednesday, March 7, at 7 p.m. in the Overby Center Auditorium. A short video, The Truth About GasLand and a question and answer session will follow the film. Fresh, a film celebrating the farmers, thinkers and business people across America who are re-inventing our food system, will be shown Wednesday, April 4 at 7 p.m. in the Overby Center Auditorium. Both events are free and open to the public. Go here for more information about the environmental studies minor at UM.

UM Army ROTC Wins First Place at Joint Field Training Exercise

OXFORD, Miss. – Continuing its recent string of award-winning finishes, the Army Reserve Officer Training Corps program at the University of Mississippi has won first place during the Joint Field Training Exercise. Competing the weekend of Feb. 24-26 at Camp McCain near Grenada, Ole Miss ROTC outranked 16 schools from Florida, Alabama, Mississippi and Louisiana, including arch rivals Mississippi State University, the University of Alabama and Louisiana State University. Being one of the largest ROTC programs to attend – with 28 junior cadets – the honor is especially noteworthy because it was statistically harder for it to win. “We were really focused on this and the hard work paid off,” said Master Sgt. Michael Howland, UM senior military instructor. “It’s always fun to hear the Hotty Toddy at an awards ceremony!” The Joint Field Training Exercise is the precursor to the Leadership Development Assessment Course, held annually at Fort Lewis, Wash. The grading scale was a cumulative average of each cadet’s Army Physical Fitness Test score, land navigation score (written, day and night) and leadership evaluations of Squad Tactical Exercises in a garrison and combat scenario. The evaluations were done by cadre from all the school who attended. Conducted between a cadet’s junior and senior year, LDAC serves as the national culmination exercise for all the training the cadet receives in ROTC, Howland said. “How a cadet does at LDAC, coupled with their cumulative GPA and APFT scores, affects where they will rank on the National Order of Merit List prior to commissioning as an officer,” Howland said. “The OML encompasses over 6,000 cadets nationwide.” The department won one of eight MacArthur Awards earlier last month. The prestigious awards, presented by the U.S. Army Cadet Command and the Gen. Douglas MacArthur Foundation, recognize the ideals of “duty, honor and country” as advocated by MacArthur. The award is based on a combination of the achievement of the school’s commissioning mission and its cadets’ performance. This is the third consecutive year that the battalion has grabbed national honors. Eleven cadets captured high honors at the 2010 Ranger Challenge Team Competition, placing second out of the field of 45 teams from colleges and universities in Mississippi, Alabama, Florida, Georgia and Louisiana. Last spring, the Rebel Battalion was selected as second-best in the nation in the annual Order of the Founders and Patriots of America “Outstanding Army ROTC Unit Award.” Seattle University placed first, with Cameron University coming in third. “The national rankings and recognition we’ve received during the last few years, along with our first-place finish last weekend at the JFTX, are positive indicators regarding the strength of the program,” said Maj. Walt Vinzant, ROTC recruiting officer. “We’re very pleased with the performance of our MSIII cadets (juniors), but equally proud of the MSIV cadets (seniors) that had a large role in the MSIII’s training.” MSIII primary instructors Brady Williamson and SFC Joseph Betterton are the people largely responsible for the MSIII’s success, Vinzant said. “Both men are committed to excellence and did a super job ensuring our cadets were academically and physically prepared for the event.” This year, the program will commission 26 new lieutenants into the Army. Fifteen will go active duty. Seven of those cadets are Distinguished Military Graduates, indicating that they are in the top 10 percent of cadets nationally as a result of their academic and military performances while in ROTC. ROTC at UM was established March 11, 1936, and traces its history back to the University Grays, which was formed in 1861. For more information about UM’s ROTC program, visit Army, Navy/Marines, and Air Force.

Clarion Ledger: Center for the Study of Southern Culture celebrating 25 years

The Center for the Study of Southern Culture at Ole Miss hosts the Music of the South Symposium Friday and Saturday to celebrate the 25th anniversary of the center’s Southern Studies master’s program. The main organizers of the free event are Ted Ownby, center director, and Mark Camarigg of Living Blues magazine, which is published by the center. Read the story