Non-fiction author David Magee appeared Monday on CNBC to discuss GM's historic bankruptcy following President Barack Obama's news conference outlining details of the proceeding and the U.S. government's role.
The Education of Mr. Mayfield: An Unusual Story of Social Change at Ole Miss
by David Magee
More than a decade before the media reported on the disturbing events surrounding James Meredith’s enrollment at the University of Mississippi in 1962, a different story of interaction between the races quietly took place on that same campus. This story is now told in The Education of Mr. Mayfield.
In 1949, soon after arriving in Oxford, Mississippi, as the school’s first Art Department chairman, Stuart Purser was driving through the nearby countryside when he spied some interesting sculptures on the front porch of a small farmhouse near Ecru. When Purser stopped to speak with the African-American artist, his longtime friendship with M. B. Mayfield began.
That fall, Purser offered Mayfield a job as custodian for the Art Department and caretaker for the newly opened student art gallery. This was a time when the University of Mississippi was completely segregated. What few outside the Art Department knew was that Purser also gave Mayfield one-on-one instruction and arranged for classroom doors to be open so Mayfield could listen to lectures while sitting in the nearby broom closet. Later, Purser took Mayfield on his lecture trips, passing Mayfield off as an assistant who carted equipment and set up the projector.
While in Oxford, Purser also became friends with renowned author William Faulkner. Faulkner, along with Purser and other teachers and students in the Art Department, purchased art supplies for Mayfield and encouraged his work. They even took up a collection to send Mayfield to Chicago to see a Van Gogh exhibit. One particularly moving incident described in the book came when Purser took Mayfield to Memphis to visit the Brooks Memorial Art Gallery, only to discover that on the day of their visit, the museum was open to whites only.
Not long after Purser left Oxford to start the Art Department at the University of Florida, Mayfield returned to Ecru to care for his ailing mother. Ironically, in 1967, Mayfield returned to work as a custodian at the Brooks Gallery, where he studied paintings on exhibit and displayed his own artwork in the museum’s stairwells and employee work areas. In 1986, the Center for the Study of Southern Culture at the University of Mississippi hosted one of Mayfield’s first big art exhibits. After that show, Mayfield sold almost everything he produced for the rest of his life.
The Education of Mr. Mayfield tells the story of how M. B. Mayfield overcame many of the obstacles placed in his way due to racism, but it also tells of the quiet acts of courage displayed by some white Southerners who found ways to defy the injustices of that time and place.
Published by John F. Blair, the book will be released September 1, 2009.
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