• HTA Lecture: Stories That Save Us: Teaching Elie Wiesel and the Holocaust

    Meridian Community College 910 Hwy 19 N, Meridian, MS

    Amanda Thompson is Meridian Community College’s 2025 Humanities Teacher of the Year. Thompson’s lecture, Stories That Save Us: Teaching Elie Wiesel and the Holocaust, will be presented 2/21/25 at 9:30 am on the college’s campus in the McCain Theatre. Thompson will be among those honored at the Mississippi Humanities Council Awards Ceremony March 28, 2025 at […]

    Free
  • HTA Lecture: An Act of Hope: Teaching Research-Based Academic Writing Through the Literature of Octavia E. Butler

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

    Ramona Brawner is Northwest Mississippi Community College‘s 2025 Humanities Teacher of the Year. Brawner’s lecture, An Act of Hope: Teaching Research-Based Academic Writing Through the Literature of Octavia E. Butler, will be presented 2/21/25 at 11:00 am on the college’s campus. Brawner will be among those honored at the Mississippi Humanities Council Awards Ceremony March 28, 2025 […]

  • Speakers Bureau: “Pushing Forward: Hezekiah Watkins and the Youth Movement of Mississippi”

    Hines Hall Auditorium 101 Cunningham Blvd., Booneville, MS

    In 1961, young Hezekiah Watkins was arrested at the Greyhound Bus Station in Jackson, Mississippi at the age of 13 where he was sent in a paddy wagon to Mississippi’s State Penitentiary, known as Parchman Penitentiary, and placed on Death Row. His crime? Allegedly participating with a group known as the Freedom Riders who had […]

    Free
  • Annie Devine Freedom Trail Marker Unveiling

    Canton High School 634 Finney Rd, Canton, MS, United States

    The Mississippi Humanities Council, in partnership with the Visit Mississippi, will unveil a Freedom Trail marker February 25th at Canton High School 10 am in Canton to honor the extraordinary work of Annie Devine, one of the first three Black women to stand on the floor of the House of Representative in Washington, she demanded that […]

    Free
  • Speakers Bureau: “The Mississippi Plan and the Rise of Jim Crow”

    Margaret Walker Alexander Library 2525 Robinson St, Jackson, MS

    Dr. Robbie Luckett presents: "The Mississippi Plan and the Rise of Jim Crow" 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 […]

    Free
  • Speaker Series: Paula C. Johnson

    Historic Natchez Foundation 108 S. Commerce St., Natchez, MS, United States

    The 2024-2025 season is an annual program of the Natchez Historical Society, consisting of 8 regular monthly presentations by expert speakers on humanities topics pertinent to the history of the Natchez area. Scheduled for February 25, 2025: Paula C. Johnson, Professor, Syracuse University College of Law; Co-Founder and Director of the Syracuse University College of […]

    Free
  • HTA Lecture: Educators Perceive Biliteracy as a Resource for Students in Mississippi

    Blue Mountain Christian University 201 W Main St, Blue Mountain, MS

    Rosalynn Rutland is Blue Mountain Christian University’s 2025 Humanities Teacher of the Year. Rutland’s lecture, Educators Perceive Biliteracy as a Resource for Students in Mississippi, will be presented 2/27/25 at 4:00 pm on the college’s campus in the Paschal Student Union Building. This is a presentation of portions of a qualitative study, “Listening to the Voices of […]

    Free
  • Speakers Bureau: “A Look at Mande (West African) Culture Through Traditional Music”

    Jackson Hinds Library System 605 E Northside Dr, Clinton, MS, United States

    This presentation, by Jerry Jenkins, will give the listener a glimpse of the Mande Culture of West Africa. In the tradition of the Mande, the history and culture is orally preserved in the minds and through the music of the Djeli (oral librarian/mandenka hereditary professional musicians). The establishment of the Mali Empire can be recalled […]

    Free
  • A Centennial Conversation: The Legacy of Medgar Evers, 100 years Later

    Smith Robertson Museum & Cultural Center 528 Bloom St., Jackson, MS

    In honor of the centennial birthday of Medgar W. Evers, the Mississippi Humanities Council and the Medgar and Myrlie Evers Home National Monument will co-host a program titled A Centennial Conversation: The Legacy of Medgar Evers, 100 years Later. The program will consist of a conversation between Dr. Miranda Freeman, Dean of Humanities at Tougaloo College […]

    Free
  • Black History Month Talk at IMMC

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

    Join the International Museum of Muslim Cultures for their first Gallery Talk of the year with special guests: Debora Heard, Prof of Anthropology, Nubian Archaeology and Egyptian History at the University of Chicago, Dr. Rico Chapman, Jackson State University Dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Professor of History, Daniel Heboe, Tougaloo College Prof of […]

  • The Evolution from Traditional Blues to Southern Soul

    BB King Museum 400 Second Street, Indianola, MS, United States

    B.B. King Museum and Delta Interpretive Center and Mississippi Humanities Council is hosting two programs for Black History Month to celebrate special stories and initiatives. Join us for this free program moderated by Jimmie Lee, Jr with panelists Willie Clayton, Chris Ivy, J’Cenae and Dr. Alphonso Sande

  • Charles Evers Freedom Trail Marker Unveiling

    Jefferson County Courthouse 1483 Main St, Fayette, MS, United States

    The Mississippi Humanities Council, in partnership with the Visit Mississippi, will unveil a Freedom Trail marker February 28th in Fayette  at the Jefferson County Courthouse at 12 pm to honor the extraordinary work of Charles Evers. Evers was elected in Fayette, Mississippi, as the first African-American mayor of a biracial town in Mississippi since the […]