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Influential UO Anthropology Professor Dies

Harry F. Wolcott (1929--2012)

Harry Fletcher Wolcott was born 28 February, 1929 to LeRoy Orton Wolcott and Alice Fletcher Wolcott, the first of two sons. He died on October 31, 2012 of complications of Parkinson’s Disease. Harry attended public schools in Oakland and proceeded to Cal-Berkeley where he took a bachelor’s degree in science. After serving in the military, he achieved the rank of sergeant-first-class, he earned a teaching credential at San Francisco State College and went on for a master’s degree in educational administration. Subsequently he taught in the schools of Richmond and Carmel. A student of George Spindler at Stanford University, Harry graduated with his Ph.D. in 1964 and immediately began his professorial career in the College of Education at the University of Oregon, where he remained until he retired in 1999 as Professor Emeritus of Anthropology. A prolific ethnographer of education, he was active in publishing until 2010, when his Ethnography Lessons: A Primer was released by Left Coast Press, and he continued to appear in public presentations until 2011.

Harry was in on the “ground floor” of the emerging field of educational anthropology, serving as the Council on Anthropology and Education’s fourth president (1972-73), and, with Elizabeth Eddy, sharing the inaugural George and Louise Spindler Award (1989). Harry launched his editorship of Anthropology and Education Quarterly (1983-85) with his own lead article, the first in the “Sneaky Kid” trilogy. Through his writings, mentorship, and personal encounters he was one of the most influential scholars in the field of educational anthropology.

Harry’s students remember him as “a demanding but extremely helpful dissertation advisor,” a “wonderful colleague and friend, highly intelligent and very funny,” a “generous dinner host,” a “life-time doktorvater who read and critiqued his former students’ book manuscripts and journal article drafts many years after they completed their work with him,” a “true mentor and friend” who drew students from around the world, and “a wonderful scholar, teacher, doctoral supervisor, and friend.”

Harry will be honored at a session of this year’s AAA Meeting scheduled for 4-5:45 pm Wednesday, November 14 (Hilton Franciscan D). The session will engage the corpus of Harry’s work and, in lieu of his planned discussant commentary, will provide an opportunity for those in attendance to remember him and to reflect on his many contributions to the field. In addition, plans are under way to establish a new CAE award in Harry’s name for exemplary contributions to “Genuine Ethnography in Education” (as defined by Harry).
Harry will be greatly missed in the field of anthropology and education. He leaves an unforgettable legacy in his scholarship, his students, and all those whose lives he touched and changed for the better. Harry is survived by his long-time partner, Norman Delue, his nephews Rodney and Rick and his niece Peggy and their families, and a legion of former students and colleagues.

If you knew Harry, or admired Dr. Wolcott’s work, please feel free to sign the guest book at www.registerguard.com/legacy, which remain online until December 4th, 2012. Cards may be sent to his home address: 85711 S. Willamette St., Eugene, OR 97405.

Portions of this text were authored by Ray Barnhardt, Heewon Chang, and Teresa L. McCarty, and/or published in the Eugene Register Guard on Sunday, November 4, 2012.

Mu-Lung Hsu receives Southeast Asian Studies Award

Mu-Lung Hsu has received a Southeast Asian Studies Award ($2,500) from the Graduate School to support his field research in Myanmar/Burma during summer 2013. Congratulations Mu-Lung!

Erlandson selected as AAAS Fellow

Prof. Jon Erlandson has been elected as a Fellow of the prestigious American Academy of Arts and Sciences; this is great honor for Prof. Erlandson and the department. Read about the details here: http://uonews.uoregon.edu/archive/news-release/2013/4/uos-jon-erlandson-elected-american-academy-arts-and-sciences. Congratulations Jon!

Moreno elected to the Governing Council of the Agriculture, Food and Human Values Society

Geraldine Moreno was recently elected to serve a three year term on the Governing Council of the Agriculture, Food and Human Values Society (AFHVS). AFHVS is a national organization that provides a forum for examining the values that underlie various visions of food and agricultural systems.

Anna Sloan awarded Harper Fellowship

The Cheryl L. Harper Memorial Fund committee (Gyoung-Ah Lee, Stephen Dueppen, Madonna Moss [chair]) is pleased to announce the third recipient of the Cheryl L. Harper Fellowship. Anna Sloan will receive $1000 to allow her to study the Inupiaq language and enroll in the online course, “Native Cultures of Alaska,” through the University of Alaska, Fairbanks. These opportunities will expand her knowledge related to her research on Inupiat and Yup’ik Animal Taxonomies and Zooarchaeology in Alaska. Congratulations Anna!

White, Snodgrass and Baxter receive Rippey Innovative Teaching Awards

Three Anthropology faculty members have received  Rippey Innovative Teaching Awards for Freshman Interest Groups associated with large  general  education classes in Fall 2013 and Fall 2014. Diane Baxter’s is for “Global Oregon” (with Shaul Cohen, Geography), Josh Snodgrass’ is for “Students without Borders” (on global health, with psychologist Jeff Measelle), and Frances White’s is for “Animal Behavior” field trips (with biologist Debbie Schelnoff). Congratulations to all!

Snodgrass receives Incubating Interdisciplinary Initiatives award

Josh Snodgrass is part of a team of investigators that  received a $50,000 “Incubating Interdisciplinary Initiatives” award from the UO Office of Research, Innovation, and Graduate Education. The project, titled, The Role of Arts Programs in Fostering an Organizational Culture of Patient-Centered Care and an Environment of Healing in Hospitals and Hospices, identifies management policies and practices required for strategic implementation of arts programs to create an organizational culture of healing in hospital and hospice settings. The other co-investigators are Patricia Dewey (A&AA), Pranjal Mehta (Psychology), Kristin Yarris (International Studies), and Laura Zaerr (Music). Institutional partners are PeaceHealth RiverBend  and Samaritan Health Services. In addition to funding research, the award also will help fund a GTF position in Anthropology. Congratulations Josh!

Rory Walsh Awarded NSF East Asia and Pacific Program Grant

Rory Walsh was awarded an NSF East Asia and Pacific Program Grant for her fieldwork in Korea during summer 2013. Her project is “Ancient State Formation in Korea: Ceramic Production Consumption and Exchange in the Baekje Kingdom.” It includes a stipend of $5000 and a travel/living allowance. Congratulations Rory!

Oregon Folklife Network and Latino Roots Project in the Register-Guard

An article about Oregon folklore by UO Oregon Folklife Network director Riki Saltzman was in the March 22 Register-Guard. The Latino Roots project is also mentioned: http://www.registerguard.com/web/news/sevendays/29598321-47/oregon-traditional-folklife-artists-cultural.html.csp

Samantha King awarded CSWS research grant

Samantha King was awarded a CSWS research grant of $2500 for her project “the Ethics of Organic: Gender, Sustainability, and  the Agrarian Economy in the Commonwealth of Dominica, Eastern Caribbean.” Congratulations Samantha!

Walsh awarded FLAS

Archaeology graduate student Rory Walsh has received a Summer Foreign Language and Areas Studies (FLAS) Fellowship for 2013 for the study of Korean. Congratulations Rory!