What We Can Learn From… Lecture Series

Aven Hall 200 Capitol Street, Clinton, MS

Mississippi College presents a series of talks entitled, “What We Can Learn From _____.” This talk features Daphne Chamberlain presenting on youth involvement in the Civil Rights movement. "Oh Freedom! Civil Rights, Civil Wrongs and the Young People Who Made the Jackson Movement. Following the talk, there will be a reception with live music by […]

Free

Natchez Literary & Cinema Celebration

Natchez Convention Center 211 Main Street, Natchez, MS

This annual celebration, which began in 1990, is a theme-based lecture series enhanced by films, workshops, exhibitions, book signings, concerts, discussions and more. The conference is made possible in part by the Mississippi Humanities Council. Here's a list of presenters: Dr. Rebecca Hall, Wake: The Hidden History of Women-Led Slave Revolts (Simon and Schuster, 2021) […]

Free

The Impact of Rap Music on Today’s Youth

zoom

Community Library Mississippi presents The Impact of Rap Music on Today's Youth Community Speaking Series presented Malesha Smith live on Zoom and Facebook Live. Get your tickets at eventbrite.com  or email communitylibrary.ms@gmail.com for more information.

Free

Meridian History Walk

Meridian, MS

From the Civil War burning of Meridian to a tornado wiping out the city’s business district 1906, the history of the Queen City will come alive for area residents Saturday during the second annual Meridian Downtown History Walk. Free to the public, the self-guided history walk will begin at noon and run until 4 p.m. […]

Free

Oral History Workshop

Tell Your Story Stories guide our work and are the threads that bring communities together and connect people to the things they're passionate about. We're proud to partner with the Mississippi Humanities Council to present this full-day introductory workshop designed for anyone interested in documenting advocacy, family history, or community stories by recording oral history […]

Free

Grants Workshop

Register today! Join representatives from the National Endowment for the Arts and the National Endowment for Humanities virtually to learn more about funding opportunities through grants other resources. Questions or registration: christopher_miller@hydesimth.senate.gov

Free

Public Humanities Awards

TWO MISSISSIPPI MUSEUMS 222 NORTH STREET , JACKSON, MS, United States

The Mississippi Humanities Council announced the winners of its 2023 Public Humanities Awards recognizing outstanding work in preserving and sharing Mississippi’s unique history and culture. The awards ceremony will be held March 24, 2023 at the Two Mississippi Museums in Jackson. Tickets can be purchased at mshumanities.org. Also, the MHC will recognize 30 recipients of […]

Banned Book Festival

Millsaps College 1701 N. State Street, Jackson, Mississippi

Millsaps College will host its very first Banned Books Festival on March 25, 2023. Increasingly, multitudes of books have been banned from public school libraries for their subject matter—for example, exploring racial justice and injustice, documenting investigative reporting and navigating difficult experiences through memoir. In reaction to these rising bans, the Medgar and Myrlie Evers […]

The Twenty-Ninth Oxford Conference for the Book

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

Founded by the Center for the Study of Southern Culture and Square Books, the Oxford Conference  for the Book brings together fiction and nonfiction writers, journalists, artists, poets, publishers, teachers, students, and literacy advocates for three days of conversation in the literary town of Oxford, Mississippi. This is the longest-running event put on by the Center […]

Free

Ideas on Tap – The Women who Run our State

Cultivation Food Hall 1200 Eastover Drive #125, Jackson, MS, United States

According to the 2016 Clarion Ledger article, “The Women who Run our State”, “Of 172 legislative seats at the state Capitol, only 25 are filled by women.” Now in 2023, that number has decreased to 23. The article also states that in 2016, “Only five of our 19 higher court judges and justices are women”. […]

Free

Creating Space for Lucy: Philosophy, Race and the Artisan Nashville Ballet’s Lucy Negro Redux

Mississippi State University will host this conference intended to bring together the artist who created Nashville Ballet's "Lucy Negro Redux" with both senior and junior scholars in academic fields important for thinking through different aspects of it. Featured Events include: A Roundtable Discussion with poet, Caroline Randall Williams, choreographer Paul Vasterling, and originator of the […]

Free