Coming to America: How Immigrant Composers Have Enriched Our Musical Culture

Northeast Mississippi Community College 101 Cunningham Blvd., Booneville, MS

Dr. Amanda Mattox, Humanities Teacher Award winner for Northeast Mississippi Community College, will present her public lecture: Major European composers immigrated to the United States during the 1930s to escape oppressive political situations. This lecture surveys how these and other immigrant musicians have had a profound effect on concert music in America through composition and […]

Forms and Narratives in Art

East Central Community College 275 W Broad Street, Decatur, MS

Mr. Jeffrey Hodges, Humanities Teacher Awardee for East Central Community College, will present his public lecture, "Forms and Narratives in Art."

Connections

East Mississippi Community College - Scooba Campus 1512 Kemper Street, Scooba, MS

Mr. Terry Cherry, Humanities Teacher of the Year for East Mississippi Community College, presents his public lecture: In his presentation, Cherry focuses on three concepts: The art he creates stands on the shoulders of artists who have inspired him.  Secondly, how his art is connected to other art through art history in general.  Lastly, how […]

One Woman’s Fight Against the Butcher of Lyon

Northwest Mississippi Community College 4975 Hwy 51 N, Senatobia, 38668

Ms. Carla Townsend, Humanities Teacher Awardee for Northwest Mississippi Community College, presents her public lecture: Townsend will be discussing the resistance movement in France during World War II. The focus will be on the actions of one incredibly heroic woman named Virginia Hall, who defied conventional norms in the fight against fascism. 

NLCC 2020: Visits, Vittles & Vines: The Culture of Southern Hospitality

Natchez Convention Center 211 Main Street, Natchez, MS

The 2020 conference will focus on the heritage of Southern hospitality. It will highlight the many cultures and rich traditions that make up the food, gardens, and entertainment that we are so known for in the South, and how it transcends race and class lines. Topics and themes that will be addressed in the various […]

Modernism, Poetry and Cinema Celebrity Culture: At the Crossroads of High and Low Art

Jackson State University 1400 J.R. Lynch Street, Jackson, MS

Dr. Leticia Alonso, Humanities Teacher Award winner for Jackson State University, will present her public lecture: At the heart of Modernism was the attraction to cinema celebrity culture. The popularization of film stars such as Charlie Chaplin, Buster Keaton, Mary Pickford and Brigitte Helm shaped the cultural imaginary of modernity to such an extent that […]

50th Recollection of Gibbs-Green: Survivors Exhibition

Jackson State University 1400 J.R. Lynch Street, Jackson, MS

    In the spring of 1970, college and university students across the country protested against the Vietnam War, racism, gender oppression, and a host of other issues, at times leading to violent and deadly confrontations with police and national guard troops. On May 14th, 1970, students at Jackson State College staged a demonstration condemning […]

“Back in the Day” Black History Celebration

New Hope Baptist Church 5202 Watkins Dr., Jackson, MS

A month-long series of programs honoring African American history in Mississippi, culminating in the keynote address from Hon. Constance Slaughter-Harvey on February 27. After serving as student body president and graduating from Tougaloo College with a degree in political science, Slaughter attended law school at the University of Mississippi. In 1970, amid death threats and […]

SB: Parallels of Southern Storytelling & Folktales from Around the World

William Carey University 710 William Carey Parkway, Hattiesburg, MS

Diane uses the art of storytelling to uncover folktales from the south, oral history from Mississippi, often paralleling these story motifs with folktales from around the world. Speakers Expertise: Diane Williams is a neo-griot, along the lines of the story­tellers from times gone by when oral historians were crucial to maintaining black folks' history because […]

Corinth Contraband Experience

Corinth Coliseum 404 Taylor St., Corinth, MS

          Northeast Mississippi Community College has partnered with the National Park Service to create augmented reality to provide interpretation for existing statues and reliefs at the Corinth Contraband Camp.

The Global South and the Black Diaspora–From Mississippi to the Caribbean

Millsaps College 1701 N. State Street, Jackson, Mississippi

A two-day event with keynote presentations by Dr. Jarvis McInnis, the Cordelia and William Laverack Assistant Professor of English at Duke University. A graduate of Tougaloo College, Dr. McInnis's upcoming book, The Afterlives of the Plantation: Aesthetics, Labor, and Diaspora in the Global Black South, examines black transnational identity through African American and Caribbean culture […]