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University of Mississippi

Archive for the ‘Featured News’ Category

Graduate Student Monica Campbell wins Research Grant

Posted on: April 8th, 2019 by

Monica N. Campbell, a Ph.D. candidate in the Arch Dalrymple III Department of History, has been awarded an Albert J. Beveridge Grant to support research in the history of the Western Hemisphere (United States, Canada, and Latin America) from the American Historical Association.

Campbell will use this money together with a Dalrymple Research Grant for summer 2019 to visit the LBJ Library in Austin and to revisit the archives at the University of Arkansas in Fayetteville.

These research trips will help Campbell complete her dissertation, which charts the implementation of wholly market and private sector based urban planning policies through Little Rock’s Metroplan urban renewal program in the 1950s/60s. Specifically, she examines how Little Rock’s urban renewal strategists adapted the policies that became neoliberalism – including the destruction of public housing, the public-private coalition of city government and private investors, and gentrification – decades before they appeared in larger cities. She argues that, although on the national periphery and controversial in the 1950s, Little Rock’s urban renewal policies helped redefine the center ground of American political economy twenty years later. Close examination of this moment in urban history illustrates how smaller cities served as laboratories for urban renewal plans that centered around business and pro-growth politics to revitalize city centers, rather than escape them, in conjunction with state anti-labor policies that would inform the emergence of third-way liberalism in the 1970s.

Shennette Garrett-Scott Featured in PBS Documentary

Posted on: April 8th, 2019 by

Associate Professor of History & African American Studies Shennette Garrett-Scott will be featured on PBS’s new documentary series “Boss: The Black Experience in Business,” which premieres Tuesday, April 23 at 8PM. Catch Dr. Garrett-Scott in this trailer, and don’t forget to tune in!

Students Present Research at Undergraduate Conference

Posted on: April 8th, 2019 by

Three University of Mississippi undergraduates presented their original research at Mississippi State’s eleventh annual Symposium for History Undergraduate Research in Starkville on April 5-6, 2019.

History and English major Jacob Ferguson, explored why and to what extent did white southerners and slave owners listened to slave testimonies in his paper, “Paternalism and Property Rights in the Slaveholding South: F.A.P. Barnard’s Trial at the University of Mississippi, White Southerners, and Slave Testimonies.” Ferguson’s starting point is the rape of Jane, an enslaved woman claimed by University of Mississippi Chancellor F.A.P. Barnard, who was attacked by a white student in 1859. Though the Board of Trustees found the accused student legally not guilty, Barnard had the student’s guardians withdraw him from the university, which led to questions among university faculty and prominent community members about whether Barnard was sound on the slavery question. Eventually, Barnard’s decision to take the word of a slave over that of a white student led to a second trial to determine where Barnard’s loyalties lay, and Barnard’s eventual resignation. Ferguson then considers a variety of situations in which slaves commanded an audience, including moments when masters were expected to listen to and respond to slave complaints. In discussing these circumstances at length, it arrives at a more nuanced understanding of the traditional slave-master relationship and what it meant to be a respected southern slave master.

Brian Hicks, a history and political science major, presented a paper entitled, “World War II: Alles, Axis, and EGYPT?!?!?: American and Egyptian Relations During World War II.”  Drawing on a collection of American State Papers from the World War II period, Hicks explored the trade and cultural relations between United States and Egypt during the course of World War II, with a specific focus on how trade relations not only benefitted Egypt, but also helped establish expanding American influence on the World. By doing so, Hicks aims to shed additional light on the ignored countries of World War II and add to the existing literature on the effects of World War II.

Finally, in “The Stories They Told: An Examination of The Stars and Stripes Newspaper Collection in the Archives of at University of Mississippi,” history major Jordan Holman explored The Stars and Stripes, a newspaper published in Paris by the American Expeditionary Forces (A.E.F.) in WWI to give insight into the lives of the American soldiers engaged in the conflict. Specifically, Jordan’s paper sought to give context to the tagline “by and for the soldiers of the A.E.F.” – uncovering what it means for a newspaper to be written by ex-soldiers for current soldiers. It also examines both the dialogue and narrative the soldiers created for themselves and one another, and how the soldiers catered to one another’s psychological needs through the written word, as The Stars and Stripes became, in the words of John Winterich, “the emotional pacemaker of the A.E.F.”

Learn about Study Abroad on April 18

Posted on: April 8th, 2019 by

Are you thinking about Study Abroad? Want to learn more about where you can travel? How it’ll affect your progress towards your degree? What it will cost?

The Undergraduate Committee has you covered! Come join us on Thursday, April 18 from noon to 1PM in the Bishop Hall Third Floor lobby for information and free pizza!

Ida B. Wells Teach-In: A Monument to Justice

Posted on: March 27th, 2019 by

Come join us April 5, 4-6pm in Barnard Observatory 105 to learn more about the life and legacy of Ida B. Wells and efforts to honor her at the University of Mississippi. We’ll read selections from her writings, learn about her racial justice activism and feminism, hear from her great-granddaughter Michelle Duster, and give away tee-shirts, buttons, and patches in a round of trivia.

Preview Fall 2019 Courses

Posted on: March 5th, 2019 by

It’s hard to believe that we’ll need to start thinking about Summer and Fall 2019 courses, huh? It’s true, though! Summer and Fall academic advising will officially begin immediately after spring break. Let’s celebrate advising season together, the best way we know how: with cupcakes.

Join us on Tuesday, March 19 from 3:30-5PM in Bishop Hall 2nd Floor for a preview of 2019 Summer and Fall courses, the chance to learn more about internships and study abroad, and, you know, cupcakes.

Women’s History Month Speaker: Anne Balay

Posted on: March 5th, 2019 by

Anne Balay lectures at 4 p.m. for this special Monday Brown Bag as part of Women’s History Month. Long-haul trucking is linked to almost every industry in America, yet somehow the working-class drivers behind big rigs remain largely hidden from public view. Gritty, inspiring, and often devastating oral histories of gay, transsexual, and minority truck drivers allow award-winning author Anne Balay to shed new light on the harsh realities of truckers’ lives behind the wheel. A licensed commercial truck driver herself, Balay discovers that, for people routinely subjected to prejudice, hatred, and violence in their hometowns and in the job market, trucking can provide an opportunity for safety, welcome isolation, and a chance to be themselves—even as the low-wage work is fraught with tightening regulations, constant surveillance, danger, and exploitation. The narratives of minority and queer truckers underscore the working-class struggle to earn a living while preserving one’s safety, dignity, and selfhood.

Anne Balay is winner of the Lambda Literary Emerging Writers Award. She teaches in gender and sexuality studies at Haverford College and is the author of Steel Closets.

The Brown Bag Lecture Series takes place in the Tupelo Room of Barnard Observatory unless otherwise notedVisit southernstudies.olemiss.edu for more information.

“Centrism and moderation? No thanks.”

Posted on: February 27th, 2019 by

April Holm, associate professor of history at the University of Mississippi and the author of A Kingdom Divided: Evangelicals, Loyalty, and Sectionalism in the Civil War Era, is in the Washington Post. Click here to read the article!

 

Dr. Garrett-Scott to Speak on Black Women in Banks

Posted on: January 28th, 2019 by

Dr. Shennette Garrett-Scott, Associate professor of History and African American Studies at the University of Mississippi talks on Black Women in Banks in a brown bag lunch talk at noon in Tupelo Room, Barnard Observatory on Wednesday, January 30, 2019.

For more detailed information please check Southern Studies’ website.

 

 

Public History Course Completes Website on Neilson’s Department Store

Posted on: January 16th, 2019 by

Students in Professor Alexandra Lindgren-Gibson‘s winter intersession course on “Public History from Colonial Williamsburg to Drunk History,” spent the past two weeks investigating and documenting the history of an Oxford landmark, Neilson’s Department Store.

Using the records related to Neilson’s Department Store at the Archives & Special Collections at the UM Library, they created an online exhibit that presents their findings.