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About
Us
Our
Faculty
The faculty of the Department of History offers programs
of study leading to the
B. A., M. A. and Ph. D. degrees. The faculty has achieved
distinction in research and teaching. Members of the
faculty have been awarded the Bancroft
Prize,
the Lillian
Smith Prize, and the
British Council Prize
for their publications and four members of the faculty
have received distinguished teaching awards. The curriculum
covers nearly all the major areas of historical study.
Students may select from a wide range of courses dealing
with American, European, Latin American, African and
East Asian history. At the graduate level the Department
emphasizes American history, especially the history
of the American South, European and Latin American history.
The Department is deeply involved in the activities
of the Center
for the Study of Southern Culture, the
Croft Institute for International Studies,
the McDonnell-Barksdale
Honors College, the Sarah
Isom Center for Womens Studies and the
Program in Afro-American Studies. The Director of the
Center for the Study of Southern Culture and two faculty
members have joint-appointments with the Department,
the Executive Director of the Croft Institute for International
Studies and three faculty members have appointments
in the Department and the international studies program
offered by the Croft Institute. Three members of the
faculty have joint-appointments with the Program in
Afro-American Studies. The Interim Director of the McDonnell-Barksdale
Honors College and the Interim Director of the Trent
Lott Leadership Institute are from the Department of
History.
Symposium
The Department of History sponsors the annual Porter
L. Fortune Symposium on History each fall. The Symposium
brings to the campus well-known scholars for a three-day
conference dealing with various aspects of southern
history. Recent topics have included religion in the
South, gender and politics in the South, the Civil Rights
movement and the South in the Caribbean.
Resources
Within the University, the Department of History relies
on the John
Davis Williams Library which contains nearly
1 million volumes. Of particular interest to graduate
students are the Mississippi Collection of books and
manuscripts pertaining to the state, the Blues Archive
and the depository of federal government documents.
The Department has approximately one hundred-fifty undergraduate
history majors and approximately fifty graduate students
pursuing graduate degrees.
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