The
Tucson Rodeo Parade is honored to present,
James “Big Jim” Griffith as its 2010 Grand Marshal.
Teacher, founder, anthropologist, author, story teller,
award-winning musician, and folklorist all describe the 2010 Tucson
Rodeo Parade Grand Marshal, James “Big Jim” Griffith.
For over four decades Big Jim has studied folkways and religious
expression throughout the United States-Mexico border region.
Griffith’s work as an academic and public folklorist has been
extraordinary and his legacy includes founding the Southwest
Folklore Center at the University of Arizona and the annual Tucson
Meet Yourself Folk Arts Festival.
Jim Griffith was born in Santa Barbara, California, and came to
Tucson in 1955 to attend the University of Arizona. He has
considered himself a permanent Tucson resident since 1963. He loves
Southern Arizona and has said, “I guess I’ll stay in Tucson as long
as it gets worse slower than other places.”
He received all three of his degrees from the University of Arizona,
the Ph.D. in cultural anthropology and art history in 1973. From
1979 until his retirement in 1998 he ran the University’s Southwest
Folklore Center. He is currently a Research Associate at the Center.
With his wife, Loma, he started Tucson Meet Yourself in 1974. The
celebration of Tucson’s ethnic and cultural diversity now draws over
100,000 participants annually.
Although he retired as director of the festival in 1995, he is once
again heavily involved in this project. Starting in 1985, he wrote
and hosted “Southern Arizona Traditions,” a weekly 3-minute spot on
KUAT-TV’s Arizona Illustrated program. For 2 ½ years in the late
1980s he wrote a monthly column on “Local Custom” for the
now-defunct City Magazine. He was curator for eleven exhibitions of
regional traditional arts, the most recent being “La Cadena Que No
Se Corta/The Unbroken Chain: The Traditional Arts of Tucson’s
Mexican American Community,” at the University of Arizona Museum of
Art in the winter of 1996-7.
Griffith has written seven books on Southern Arizona and Northern
Mexico folk arts, traditions and religious art. He has been honored
by several literary societies and includes such awards as the 2005
Henry Glassie Award and the 2009 Pima County Library Lifetime
Achievement Award. He is currently researching for a book on the
religious art of Sonora, and finishing a guide to regional folklore.
Big Jim is also an accomplished and award-winning banjo player. He
recorded Dixie Cowboy, a CD collection of bluegrass and folk tunes,
and also collected the songs and wrote the liner notes for the CD
Heroes and Horses: Corridos of the Arizona-Sonora Borderlands,
Jim Griffith’s professional commitment has always been to try to
understand the cultures of this part of the border, and to pass
along that understanding, as respectfully and accurately as
possible, to the general public. His commitment to the history and
culture of the Southwest make Big Jim a natural selection as Grand
Marshal.