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Author and alumnus David Joy to give keynote address at WCU Research and Scholarship Conference

David Joy

David Joy

By Matt Salerno

Ìð¹ÏÊÓƵapp double alumnus and best-selling author David Joy will give the keynote address at the annual Research and Scholarship Conference at WCU. The event will take place from 5 to 6 p.m. on Wednesday, March 19 in the Ramsey Regional Activity Center.

On the same day, WCU students will share oral presentations and performances in the A.K. Hinds University Center from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m., and the preliminary faculty Three-Minute Research competition will be held from 3 to 5 p.m. at the Ramsey Center.

Following the keynote address by Joy, RASC will celebrate the annual Undergraduate Exposition and Graduate Research Symposium’s fine arts exhibits and poster presentations on the Ramsey Center concourse from 6 to 7:30 p.m. A reception will be provided.

All events listed above are open to the public with free admission.

Joy’s keynote address will center on Western North Carolina mountain life and his scholarly writing process.  Joy is a 12th-generation North Carolinian. The WCU community and public are invited to attend and engage in a thought-provoking presentation that aligns with WCU’s research mission and campus theme, “WNC Mountain Life.â€

Joy received his bachelor’s and master’s degrees from WCU. His work, which includes five best-selling novels, has garnered acclaim with awards like the Sir Walter Raleigh Award for Fiction, the Thomas Wolfe Memorial Literary Award and the Southern Book Prize.  

He has always displayed the breadth of lived experiences through the characters in his novels, creating a more accurate and equitable representation of people from the region. Joy’s novels follow the lives of everyday, working-class people dealing with universal issues of race, addiction and mental health.  The stories are rooted in Jackson County, and those who know the area will recognize the street names, creeks and stores that dot the world his characters inhabit.  Through the commercial success of his novels, he has brought attention to the culture of the region to a wider audience. 

Joy has also written myriad essays highlighting the importance of preserving the culture of Appalachia and understanding how it grows and evolves in publications, including The New York Times Magazine, The Huffington Post, Garden and Gun and The Bitter Southerner.  He weaves his own personal experiences with wider research on topics such as gun culture, food pathways and wildlife conservation.  Joy’s writing comments on the significance of place, time and local folk culture.

The keynote address is sponsored by the Office of the Provost, the Graduate School and Research, Hunter Library and the Brinson Honors College. 

RASC highlights WCU’s commitment to support and encourage research and scholarship of students and faculty.  All students, both undergraduates and graduates, get an opportunity to share their scholarly research findings at this annual event.  RASC also offers faculty an opportunity to share their research in the annual Three-Minute Research Competition. 

RASC is a WCU DegreePlus designated event. For more information about the event, visit  or contact Suzanne Melton, research programs coordinator, at scmelton@wcu.edu.