B.A. in Southern Studies

Degree Requirements

The academic regulations for this degree program, as entered in the University of Mississippi Catalog, are in effect for the current or selected academic year and semester. The University of Mississippi reserves the right to 1) change or withdraw courses; 2) change rules for registration, instruction, and graduation; and 3) change other regulations affecting the student body at any time.

General Education

Requirement Hours Description
First Year Writing I 3 Complete Hon 101, Writ 100 or Writ 101 with a passing grade.
First Year Writing II 3 Complete one of the following courses with a passing grade: Liba 102, Writ 102 or Hon 102.
6 hrs literature survey 6 Complete 6 hours of literature survey with a passing grade. Choose from the following courses: Eng 220, 221, 222, 223, 224, 225, or Eng 226.
6 hrs modern/ancient language 200+ 6 Successfully complete at least 6 hours at the 200 level or above in one modern or ancient language.
6 hrs history 6 Complete 6 hours in History (HST) course work with a passing grade.
3 hrs humanities 3 Successfully complete 3 hours in one of the following areas: African-American studies; classical civilization; environmental studies (Envs 101); gender studies (G St 201, 301, 333, 350); philosophy; religion; Southern studies (S St 101, 102). In addition, gender studies courses that are cross-listed with African American studies, classical civilization, English, modern languages, philosophy, or religion courses will satisfy this requirement.
6 hrs social science 6 Successfully complete 6 semester hours in anthropology, economics, political science, psychology, or sociology.
3 hrs fine arts 3 The course may be chosen from art history, music, dance, and theatre arts. Studio and workshop courses cannot be used to satisfy this requirement. Courses that satisfy this requirement are any Art History (AH); Liba 130, 204, 314; Mus 101, 102, 103, 104, 105; Danc 200; Thea 201, 202. Students who have completed 30 semester hours of undergraduate course work may fulfill the requirement with a 300- or 400-level art history course.
3 hrs math 100+ 3 Successfully complete 3 hours of Math at the 100 level or above except for Math 245 and Math 246.
9-12 hrs science 9 Complete a full year of science course work in one subject area (6-8 hrs) and complete 3 credit hours in a subject area from another department. Courses may be chosen from the departments of Biology, Chemistry and Biochemistry, Geology and Geological Engineering, or Physics and Astronomy.
2 associated science labs 2 Successfully complete at least two science laboratory courses.

Major Requirements

Requirement Hours Description
S St 101 3 Complete S St 101 with a passing grade.
S St 101 and 102 3 S St 102: Introduction to Southern Studies II
S St 301 3 S St 301: Methods in Southern Studies
S St 401 3 Complete S St 401 with a passing grade.
S St 402 3 Complete S St 402 with a passing grade.
Southern studies residency hrs 12 Student must earn at least 12 hours of their major courses in residence.
Overall Major GPA Please contact your academic advisor for grade point requirements.
Resident Major GPA Please contact your academic advisor for grade point requirements.

Major Requirements II

Requirement Hours Description
His 327, 330, 331, 332, 337; Engl 368 6 His 337: History of Religion in the South, Engl 368: Survey of Southern Literature, His 330: The History of Mississippi, His 331: The South Through the 19th Century, His 327: The Rise and Fall of American Slavery, His 332: The South in the 20th Century
Southern Studies electives 21 Engl 323: African American Lit Survey Since 1920, Aas 421: Readings in U.S. Black Feminism, S St 303: Women in the South, S St 108: Music and Southern Society, Aas 420: Major African American Writers, S St 102: Introduction to Southern Studies II, Aas 517: African American Musical Tradition, Econ 422: Economic Growth and Development, G St 336: Women in Southern History, Aas 302: Judicial System & African Amer Community, S St 598: Special Topics II, His 327: The Rise and Fall of American Slavery, Hst 423: History of Mass Incarceration in the US, Eng 314: The Cinematic South, Aas 443: The Civil Rights Era, Engl 476: Studies in Southern Literature, Aas 316: The African Diaspora, S St 599: Special Topics III, S St 104: The South and Race, S St 501: Sem in So. Studies, S St 536: The Southern Environment, G St 362: African American Women's History, S St 106: Introduction to Southern Documentary, Econ 335: An Economic History of the South, AH 338: Romanesque and Gothic Art, Aas 202: African American Experience II, Aas 593: African American Literature, S St 105: Introduction to the South and Food, S St 314: Race, Place, and Space, Anth 337: Anthropology of Blues Culture, Anth 334: Introduction to Field Work Techniques, Soc 315: Leisure and Popular Culture, Engl 475: Southern Environmental Writing, Engl 322: African American Lit Survey to 1920, His 337: History of Religion in the South, S St 402: Southern Studies Seminar: Culture, AH 369: Survey of Black American Art, Aas 326: African American History since 1865, Aas 325: African American History to 1865, S St 401: Southern Studies Seminar: Society, Jour 513: The Press and the Changing South, His 336: Women in Southern History, Aas 395: Survey of Black American Art, Aas 413: Race and Ethnicity, S St: Women in the South, S St 101: Introduction to Southern Studies I, Engl 466: Faulkner, AH 366: Hist. of Southern Art & Decorative Arts, S St 406: Southern Literature & the Oral Tradition, Mus 517: Afri-American Musical Traditions, Soc 351: Social Change, Aas 201: African American Experience I, Aas 441: Comparative Black Literatures, His 333: The Era of the Civil War, 1850-1877, S St 534: Documentary Photography, S St 334: Introduction to Field Work Techniques, Pol 307: Const Law II:  Civil Lib & Civil Rights, Mus 577: Diasporic African Music Cultures, His 328: History of African Americans in Sport, Pol 318: Politics of the American South, Mus 518: History of Jazz, His 334: The Blue and the Gray, S St 350: The South and Sexuality, Engl 566: Faulkner Studies, Rel 503: Major Issues in Southern Religion, S St 502: Sem in So. Studies, Aas 337: Anthropology of Blues Culture, Engl 324: Blues Tradition in American Literature, S St 301: Methods in Southern Studies, His 339: African-American Women's History, S St 103: Southern Mythologies and Popular Culture, S St 302: Jr Sem in South Stdies, Aas 341: African American Lit Survey to 1920, S St 109: Rights and Southern Activism, His 335: Economic History of the South, Soc 334: Introduction to Field Work Techniques, Pol 320: African American Politics, Aas 342: African American Lit Survey Since 1920, S St 555: Foodways and Southern Culture, S St 537: Documenting the South in Film, Engl 441: Comparative Black Literatures, Mus 321: Development of Country Music, His 329: The Civil Rights Era, S St 597: Special Topics I, Engl 368: Survey of Southern Literature, Aas 320: African American Politics, Anth 309: Indians of Mississippi and the South, Aas 310: Experiences of Black Mississippians, S St 110: Slavery and the University, Engl 310: Women in the South, Engl 373: Caribbean Literature, Engl 465: Major African American Writers, Pol 317: Mississippi Politics, Engl 467: The South in Film, Rel 303: Religion in the South, S St 107: Intro to Gender & Sexuality in the South, Anth 315: The African Diaspora, AH 386: African and African American Arts, Soc 413: Race and Ethnicity, His 307: African American History to 1865, Aas 504: Research in African American Studies, S St 533: Fieldwork & Oral History, G St 310: Women in the South, His 330: The History of Mississippi, Anth 317: Indians on the Southern Frontier, Aas 414: Race, Place, and Space, Aas 438: The Rise and Fall of American Slavery, Aas 440: History of African Americans in Sports, Aas 518: History of Jazz, Aas 334: Introduction to Field Work Techniques, Aas 386: African and African American Arts, His 308: African American History Since 1865, Anth 319: Environmental History of the South, Aas 308: Const Law II:  Civil Lib & Civil Rights
The policies and regulations contained in this online University of Mississippi Catalog are in effect for the current or selected semester. The catalog is not a contract, but rather a guide for the convenience of students. The University of Mississippi reserves the right to 1) change or withdraw courses; 2) change the fees, rules, and schedules for admission, registration, instruction, and graduation; and 3) change other regulations affecting the student body at any time. Implicit in each student’s enrollment with the university is an agreement to comply with university rules and regulations, which the university may modify to exercise properly its educational responsibility.