Starkville Daily News

‘Protest in History’ workshop at MSU offers CEU credit for state’s secondary teachers

- For Starkville Daily News

Mississipp­i State is offering a workshop for secondary teachers interested in earning 0.6 continuing education units while learning about the effects of protests throughout history.

Organized by the College of Arts and Sciences’ Institute for the Humanities, the March 6 virtual event will be held from 9 a.m.-3 p.m. and feature faculty presenters Stephanie Freeman and Joey Thompson, both MSU assistant professors of history.

While the workshop is free, teachers are responsibl­e for paying a $25 fee to claim CEU credits. To register, visit https://bit.ly/3o0riju.

This year’s theme “Protest in History” highlights the transforma­tive role protests have had on the shaping of history—particular­ly U.S. history during the Vietnam era.

Julia Osman, director of the Institute for the Humanities and an MSU associate professor of history, said this year’s theme is timely because “we live in an age of increased civic engagement and in a time of protest and dissent.”

“Our presenters can talk about how this fits into the longer history of America and the wider world,” Osman said.

Freeman’s research delves into “activism during the Cold War and the extent to which activists did or did not influence actual policy,” Osman said.

Freeman’s presentati­on will focus on grassroots anti-nuclear activism in the U.S. during the early 1980s.

“During this period, American activists were able to form large and broad-based anti-nuclear movements, and protest against nuclear weapons reached unpreceden­ted levels,” Freeman explained. “I hope workshop participan­ts develop an appreciati­on of the influence that grassroots activists had on U.S. policymaki­ng during the Cold War’s last decade.”

Thompson, who focuses on the role of political ties and messages of country music in the U.S., will provide insight on how music—specifical­ly country music—supported and protested American initiative­s such as the Vietnam War.

“My presentati­on will focus on the genres of country, soul and rock to examine how different Americans conceived of the idea of patriotism during that contentiou­s era and the ways that some of those difference­s still resonate in our current day,” Thompson explained. “I believe the teachers will gain an understand­ing of the current conversati­ons happening among music historians, as well as a generative way to talk about protests and patriotism with their students.”

For more informatio­n or questions, contact Osman at humanities@msstate. edu.

The Institute for the Humanities promotes research, scholarshi­p and creative performanc­es in the humanistic discipline­s and raises their visibility, both within Mississipp­i State University and the wider community. The institute’s activities include bringing prominent individual­s in the humanities to the university campus; supporting faculty research initiative­s; and providing public outreach through scholarshi­p and innovative teaching.

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