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Meet the House of Humanities Editors

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Welcome to the Spring 2022 issue of the House of Humanities newsletter! As one of the graduate student editors of this emerging newsletter, I’m proud to help spotlight students, faculty, and alumni from the School of Humanities who are pressing the boundaries of their fields.

 

When I was originally asked to serve on this project, I had no idea how much the newsletter would influence me. After hours of sifting through spreadsheets of alumni, learning where you all went and the things you accomplished after graduating from our programs, I realized more than ever how meaningful an education in the humanities can be. In a time marked by distance and seclusion, I have had the unique opportunity to work with a committed team to cultivate a widespread community of aspiring, current, and former humanities scholars.

 

My time at Southern Miss is coming to a close, and I am better for the relationships, challenges, and questions that have arisen here. Thanks to the skills and wisdom that I gained in the School of Humanities, I will be starting my “alt-ac” career as the new LGBTQ Health Coordinator at the Western North Carolina Community Health Service. I will apply my research, analysis, and communication skills to navigate LGBTQ patients through a complex medical and legal system while helping to expand access to affordable care for underserved North Carolinians through community engagement, cultural competency training, and grant writing and administration. As I say my goodbyes, I’m confident that the newsletter will continue to grow, never running out of outstanding scholars and practitioners to highlight, and I hope that we all continue to use this and other spaces to connect, share resources and opportunities, and celebrate each other.


-Jack Hoda

MA in English Literature

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As my fellow editor Jack said, I had no idea how meaningful working on the House of Humanities newsletter would be. My first thought after being asked to help out was something like “oh no, I left Communications to focus on poetry and scholarship. Just when I’m out, they pull me right back in!” Thankfully, I was in for a surprise. 

 

I spent years working in an office prior to entering academia. The community in an office is a strange thing. It’s real, and extremely important and nourishing at times, but still manages to feel somewhat forced. My experience as a member of various academic communities has been the polar opposite. I’ve found myself welcomed into vibrant creative circles, probing critical discussions, and the thrilling intersection of both. I’ve found mentors, readers, editors, supporters, students, and above all else friends.

 

Which is all a long way to make a short point – working on the House of Humanities has given me the privilege of getting to know USM’s academic community. All of you, past and present, are scholars, artists, and thinkers of the highest order. Perhaps more importantly, working on the newsletter has given me a chance to spotlight some of your remarkable achievements. From books published to awards won to degrees earned and far beyond, I’ve had the chance to spend the last year learning about what you all have accomplished. To say I’m honored is an understatement.


I can’t wait to continue next year and see what thrilling new heights we soar to. Until then, I hope you enjoy this spring edition of the newsletter! I was particularly excited to learn about the overseas program and how USM students and faculty are blazing trails across the globe. 



-David Greenspan

PhD in Creative Writing

Faculty Spotlight on

Dr. Amy Slagle's REL 345

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In fall 2022, Dr. Amy Slagle (Associate Professor of Religion) will offer a new course, “Magic and the Occult,” (REL 345), which invites students to explore the beliefs and practices of magical practitioners from a variety of cultural contexts. Witchcraft (both historically and today), astrology, divinatory practices, methods of spirit contact and possession (from mediumship to Ouija boards), and African-American folk magic among other topics will be discussed along with the development of occult movements such as Rosicrucianism and Freemasonry. Often derided, feared and dismissed as “superstition,” magical modes of expression exert a powerful influence on contemporary popular and political imaginations worldwide and continue to develop in tandem with emergent technologies. From deployments of Internet meme magic to affect election outcomes to the pervasiveness of esoteric symbology in films, television, and video games, magical and occult references are vital aspects of the lived experience of many Americans today. In addition to providing historical and ethnographic context for making sense of these diverse phenomena, the course also focuses on the problematic history of “magic” as a category in religious studies and the ways that magic intersects with race, gender, and class.


This course is an outgrowth of Dr. Slagle’s own research on strands of modern occultism. She has published on the reincarnationist theories of the Roman Catholic occultist, Valentin Tomberg (1900-1973), and is currently researching the visual/material culture of contemporary sigil magic.

Alumni Spotlight on

Daniel Stearman

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Daniel is exceedingly fond of the time he spent studying philosophy at USM. All of the professors he worked with helped to provide extraordinary depth and breadth in the understanding of important philosophical texts as well as assistance in developing clarity and rigor in his writing and argumentation. Professors in grad school are looking for high-caliber research skills and the ability to synthesize large swaths of information into a cohesive unity, and working closely with Dr. Smithka in the senior capstone class significantly helped Daniel achieve the kinds of skills that are necessary for this. The capstone allowed him to dig into a lot of literature that he wanted to learn more about, and the research skills that he learned during this process helped him to fit right in with topnotch graduate students. Since leaving USM, Daniel has been on a bit of a journey! He took a gap year in 2020 and worked as a service agent for an unemployment assistance program to save money for grad school. He then took a trek all the way up to York University in Toronto to work on a master's degree in philosophy, focusing on philosophical intersections with primatology and philosophy of science. Daniel’s hobby time is often just reading more philosophy, but aside from that, it's usually spent in the form of exploring the city of Toronto with his girlfriend and hanging out with the other grad students. He also plays in the snow like a child … frequently.

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Graduate Student Spotlight on Daniel Ward

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Daniel Ward is a second-year PhD student with the University of Southern Mississippi’s history program. Daniel received his BA in History and Political Science from SUNY Fredonia in 2015, and his MA in History from the University at Buffalo in 2019. Daniel’s master’s thesis considered the 1949 National Defense Unification Hearings and civil-military relations in the early Cold War. Working under the advisement of Dr. Heather Stur, Daniel studies war and society in the twentieth century United States with a focus on the Vietnam War. His dissertation research explores marriages between American soldiers and Vietnamese women during the Vietnam War. His project analyzes the development of the U.S. Army’s marital policies in the Vietnam era and their impact on the experiences of Vietnamese military brides. Daniel has recently written two book reviews for the Journal of Advanced Military Studies. He has also organized a panel for 2022’s Society for Military History Conference which will discuss gender and sexuality in twentieth century American war and society. The paper that Daniel will be presenting investigates Americans who were left in Vietnam after the fall of South Vietnam while trying to evacuate their families. Outside of school, Daniel has several hobbies. He enjoys board gaming, fantasy football, and reading science fiction and fantasy. Daniel thoroughly enjoys his experiences as a doctoral student at USM and is thrilled to be a part of the school’s intellectual community. 

Undergraduate Student Spotlight on Eden Duley

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Eden Duley (she/they) is a Junior English Major from New Albany Mississippi, a Presidential Honors Scholar, the President of the Honors College Leadership Council, Founder and Co-President of the Creative Writing Club, and Vice President of the Speech and Debate Society. Having entered the English program as a Junior in the Fall of 2021, she considers herself to be a bit of a latecomer. She has quickly found herself, however, to be more engaged by her coursework, professors, and peers than ever before, and Eden knows that she is exactly where she is meant to be. Outside of the classroom, they enjoy working on their own creative writing projects and collaborating with friends on artistic endeavors of any kind. Under the direction of Dr. Leah Parker, they are currently working on transforming their creative essay on gender transition that was featured in this year’s USM Race Gender and Sexuality Symposium into their Senior Thesis. It is incredibly exciting for Eden as a transgender writer to combine her academic goals with her personal interests, and the early stages of her thesis development have already been a deeply fulfilling experience. The English program has allowed Eden to develop a more critical and intimate relationship with the world, herself, and the systems that connect the two. That relationship is something that they know will benefit them as they pursue further opportunities in education, writing, and community work after graduation.

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Faculty and visitors at lunch

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Dr. Angela Ball

Graduate Welcome Day


After a couple of Zoom-based years, we were so excited to have an in-person Graduate Welcome Day for History and English admits this spring! Students, faculty, and prospective students gathered in Gonzales Auditorium to hear Center for Writers' faculty read. It was a lot of fun and we hope to call some of the prospective students our colleagues come fall!


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Dr. Adam Clay

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New Issue of Arete


Arete, USM's graduate school magazine, has a new issue hot off the press! "Focus on Well Being: A Key to Graduate Student Success" is a must read and features a who's who of USM Humanities scholars. It's also staffed by the talented Abby Cawley and Ashura Lewis. 

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Humanities highlights include: 


An examination on the importance of mental and physical wellness from PhD candidate Clayton Bradshaw. 


The connection between creativity and teaching from recent graduate, former teaching assistant of the year, and current visiting assistant teaching professor Dr. Rachael Fowler. 


Two recent inductees into the Graduate Student Hall of Fame - Corinne Dekkers (English, PhD) and Hayley Michael Hasik (History, PhD). 

Humanities Bookshelf

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Dr. Olivia Clare Friedman's novel, Here Lies, was published this March by Grove Atlantic!


It's received rave reviews from The New York Times, NPR, Publishers Weekly, and more. We couldn't be prouder or more excited for Dr. Friedman!

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Dr. Daniel Capper's recent manuscript, Buddhist Ecological Protection of Space: A Guide to Sustainable Travel Off-Earth, is forthcoming from Lexington Books later this year!


Buddhist Ecological Protection of Space continues Dr. Capper's fascinating work at the intersection of ecological thought and religious studies. A previous book, Roaming Free Like a Deer: Buddhism and the Natural World (Cornell University Press), offers centuries of wisdom to readers. We're sure his forthcoming book will be just as captivating!

USM Goes to France

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Dr. Courtney Luckhardt has been teaching medieval European history to a group of 20 USM freshmen and sophomores in the Château Program in Strasbourg, France this Spring 2022 semester.

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Living in Strasbourg for 2.5 months, the students attended a debate session of the European Parliament and a rally held by French President Emmanuel Macron for his re-election campaign. They have also visited the medieval university town of Heidelberg, Germany and the 12th century castle of Haut-Koenigsbourg, France in the snow!

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Want to support the School of Humanities and our work? Click here
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Simon During, in The Chronicle of Higher Education, had the following to say about what makes humanities scholars competitive for jobs -



“Being able to think logically (and dialectically); knowing more than others about the past; being good at checking things for their truth and accuracy; having a strong casuistical sense of what rules count when; being especially familiar with information and archives; being able to dream up possibilities and exciting impossibilities; being intellectually curious; being able to make quick and accurate assessments about whether this (version of an) image or a text is better in a relevant way than that one; having the ability to tell persuasive and accurate stories: All of these are dispositions and skills that secure authority and power for individuals in all kinds of situations. Such skills are not confined to the humanities, but they do thrive and expand there.”

Job Search Tips & Tricks from the HoH Community


Keep CVs updated, consistent, and organized by legible categories. Avoid distracting fonts and formatting. Highlight major accomplishments toward the top.



Stay in touch with and drop by to visit professors who might be future references to keep them abreast of what you’re doing and what kinds of opportunities you are seeking after graduation.



Apply widely, even for positions you may not think you are qualified for; a degree in the humanities is incredibly versatile and you can be competitive for jobs outside the traditional teaching, editing, publishing routes.



Try to avoid associating your personal or professional worth with your success in the job search. In our economy, a job search is a numbers game. You can apply to 200+ jobs, receive countless rejections, and get offered a handful of interviews - all to land one job. It's rough, and it's hard not to take all those automated rejections to heart. But it's not an indication of your character when you get filtered out of a position with over 500 applicants.



Make use of LinkedIn, Indeed, and other automated application sites, but don't forget to personalize cover letters and application materials.



Applying for a job where creativity is a requirement or company value? Use Canva to put together a graphic or short slidedeck about yourself!

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image via S L O W K I N G

Joyce Carol Oates Visit


On March 22, the celebrated American author Joyce Carol Oates spoke with Monika Gehlawat (English) and Andrew Haley (History) as part of the University Forum, made possible by the Office of the President and the Honors College at Southern Miss. This particular event was co-sponsored by the Center for Writers and The Mississippi Review which celebrated its fiftieth year of publishing award-winning authors and emerging writers. A luminary of the postwar American literary canon, Oates holds a longstanding professorship at Princeton University as well as numerous prestigious awards, not least of which was the National Humanities Medal presented to her in 2010 by President Barack Obama.

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Dr. Holden


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Dr. Cox


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Dr. LaPierre


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Dr. Grivno

Spring Press Releases


Dr. Vanessa Holden, professor of history and African American and Africana Studies at the University of Kentucky, gave a talk.


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Dr. Karen L. Cox, the nation’s leading expert on controversies surrounding Confederate monuments and memorials, gave the University Forum's first in-person presentation post-pandemic.


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Dr. Brian LaPierre, associate professor of history in USM's School of Humanities, gave a public lecture titled “Putin’s War in Ukraine: History, Interests, and Ambitions”.


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Dr. Max Grivno, associate professor of history in USM's School of Humanities, gave the Mississippi Humanities Council (MHC) Teacher of the Year Lecture.


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Gabrielle Walker, the 2021-22 Baird Fellow at USM's Center for the Study of the Gulf South, gave this year's Baird Lecture.


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A grant from the Mississippi Humanities Council made the annual meeting of the Mississippi Historical Society free to the public.


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Dr. Owen James, professor of African American Studies at the University of Mississippi, gave a lecture co-hosted by Center for the Study of the Gulf South and School of Coastal Resilience.


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James Berry, a U.S. Army captain completing his Ph.D. in military history at USM, has been awarded a 2022 Omar N. Bradley Officer Research Fellowship in History.


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