CANCELED: Making Sense of the American South through Baking

Event details
When

Friday, April 17, 2026 from 2:00 PM - 3:30 PM

Where
Hybrid:
Join the event in Zoom
Hatcher Gallery Event Space
Hatcher Library North, First Floor, Room 100
View building informationView floor plan
Event typeLecture/Discussion
This event has been canceled, but we plan to reschedule for Fall 2026.

Biscuits, cornbread, hot rolls, mile-high cakes, steaming cobblers — southern baking holds a towering place in the realm of American cookery. Founded on Native American, English, and African traditions, and raised in a hot, humid climate, southern baking developed in distinctive ways. We'll talk about how southerners over four centuries have shaped their baking around corn and flour and made it their own. Historian Rebecca Sharpless gives the first biennial Longone Memorial Lecture. Lemonade and light refreshments will be served. Join us in person or via Zoom.

Rebecca Sharpless writes on the intersections of food, women, and work in the American South. Her most recent books are "Grain and Fire: A History of Baking in the American South" and "People of the Wheat: Culture and Cultivation in North Texas." She is professor of history at Texas Christian University. 

Woman breaking a large scone in half.

Rebecca Sharpless.

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Juli McLoone · jmcloone@umich.edu

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