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Bill Steber is a graduate of Middle Tennessee State University
with degrees in English and Photography. He has worked at the Tennessean newspaper
in Nashville as a staff photographer since 1989, where he has won over thirty
regional and national photojournalism awards. His documentary work has been
exhibited widely throughout the South. In 1997, Steber was awarded an Alicia
Patterson Foundation grant to continue a project documenting Blues Culture
in Mississippi that he started in 1993. The grant was for one year and during
that time Steber was on sabbatical from the Tennessean. The project combines
portraits of blues musicians playing at home and in clubs with images that
describe what remains of the rural African-American culture that gave rise
to the blues. Examples include, juke joints, cotton farming, sacred music,
rural church services, river baptisms, folk religion and superstition, life
on Parchman penitentiary, hill country African fife and drum music, and diverse
regional blues styles. In addition, Steber is combining these images with
field interviews that put the photographs in an historical perspective.
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