Ideas on Tap: What Makes America Great?

Hal & Mal's 200 Commerce Street, Jackson, MS, United States

On October 29, join the Mississippi Humanities Council at Hal & Mal's for the second in a three-part series on American identity. The October 29 program will focus on patriotism: what symbols, actions, and words we use to display patriotism; what makes us feel patriotic; how patriotism differs for each person; and much more. The […]

Free

8th Annual Sweat Equity Investment in the Cotton Kingdom

The Gullah Geechee people are the descendants of Central and West Africans who came from different ethnic and social groups. They were enslaved together on the isolated sea and barrier islands that span what is now designated as the Gullah Geechee Cultural Heritage Corridor – a stretch of the U.S. coastline that extends from Pender […]

The 1965 Parchman Ordeal Presentation & Panel Discussion

Alcorn State University 1000 ASU Drive, Lorman, MS

Alcorn State University's Phi Alpha Theta & History Club will host the viewing of the documentary The Parchman Ordeal: The Untold Story, on November 6 at 1pm. Immediately following the documentary there will be a panel discussion with the film's producer, Mark LaFrancis, and two survivors of the horrific event. The documentary is especially significant to […]

Making and Unmaking Mass Incarceration

The Overby Center 555 Grove Loop, University, MS, United States

      Continuing the work of the University of Mississippi's Rethinking Mass Incarceration in the South conference in 2014 ad 2016 and Harvard's Beyond the Gates conference in 2018, the Making and Unmaking Mass Incarceration conference on December 5-7, 2019 will bring together nationally-recognized scholars, activists, policymakers, lawyers, artists, and students at the University […]

Ideas on Tap: Who Is Mississippi?

Hal & Mal's 200 Commerce Street, Jackson, MS, United States

On December 10, join the Mississippi Humanities Council and the Women's Foundation of Mississippi at Hal and Mal's in Jackson for the third in a three-part series on American identity. The December 10 program will focus on Mississippi identity in 2020. Who lives here and why? Where do Mississippians live? What brought us here or […]

Free

Capturing the Coast: Chauncey Hinman and the Tourism Industry

Biloxi Public Library 580 Howard Avenue, Biloxi, MS

The Local History and Genealogy Department of Biloxi Public Library recently received a donation of over 36,000 negatives of weddings, events, families, land aerials, and historic buildings by Chauncey Hinman. Hinman (1913-1989) was a commercial photographer who was active from the late 1940s to the 1980s. During his most active period from the 1950s-1960s, Hinman worked […]

Bridging Cultures: Working for Equity Across Race, Class, Religion, and Ethnicity

International Museum of Muslim Cultures 201 East Pascagoula Street, Jackson, MS

Through its "Bridging Cultures" Program, the International Museum of Muslin Cultures utilizes its two signature exhibitions: "Muslims with Christians and Jews: An Exhibition of Covenants and Coexistence," and "The Legacy of Timbuktu: Wonders of the Written Word" to develop a series of programs and educational opportunities.  IMMC's Islamic Thought Institute engages local and  national partners […]

Bridging Cultures: Working for Equity Across Race, Class, Religion, and Ethnicity

International Museum of Muslim Cultures 201 East Pascagoula Street, Jackson, MS

Through its "Bridging Cultures" Program, the International Museum of Muslin Cultures utilizes its two signature exhibitions: "Muslims with Christians and Jews: An Exhibition of Covenants and Coexistence," and "The Legacy of Timbuktu: Wonders of the Written Word" to develop a series of programs and educational opportunities.  IMMC's Islamic Thought Institute engages local and national partners […]

50th Recollection of Gibbs-Green: MLK Convocation

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 racial discrimination […]

SB: The Mississippi Plan and the Rise of Jim Crow

Mississippi University for Women 1100 College Street, Columbus, MS

After the Civil War, African Americans in the South, newly freed, expressed a tangible optimism that led to the reuniting of families, the development of social institutions like the black church, the rise of cultural expressions like the Blues and jazz, the establishment of black-owned businesses and other economic endeavors, and the wielding of significant […]

SB: Black Women and the Suffrage Movement in Mississippi, 1863-1965

Mississippi University for Women 1100 College Street, Columbus, MS

Black women in Mississippi actively participated in the suffrage movement after the Civil War. They fought actively for women’s suffrage even as they supported Black men and passage of the 15th Amendment. With passage of the 19th Amendment in 1920, Black women could not claim victory. It would take another 40  years before they could […]

Applied Sociology at Work: Working for Social Changes and Climate Injustice in Our Social World

JD Boyd Library 1000 ASU Drive, Lorman, MS

Humanities Teacher Awardee for Alcorn State University, Earnestine Lee, will present her public lecture: "Faced with woefully inadequate societal evidence of increasing global warming, especially in terms of reducing carbon emissions, social scientists have recognized that climate change is a human problem caused by human actions.  My research focuses on the long-term threat to human […]