βStory Stateβ shines spotlight on new era of Mississippi storytellers
Contact: Sam Kealhoefer
STARKVILLE, Miss.βΊΪΑΟΙηβs Department of Communication is hosting a statewide virtual event bringing together more than a dozen storytellers aimed to help the next generation find their place in the genealogy of Mississippi writers.
The Feb. 25 event βStory State: Fostering Innovative Storytellingβ gathers storytellers of different genres to share their experiences and offer advice. The event is free and open to the public and will be broadcast at 1 p.m. from .Μύ
Story State seeks to honor Mississippiβs artistic heritage as the birthplace of the blues and home to famous writers and artists, as well as demonstrate how new creators have transformed the face of storytelling.
βEveryone knows about Faulkner, Welty, Elvis and Robert Johnson, but there are a whole lot of other great storytellers in Mississippi,β said Josh Foreman, an instructor in the communication department and chair of this yearβs Story State planning committee.
Leading this yearβs slate of storytellers is Anna Wolfe, a Mississippi Today reporter and top investigative journalist. Wolfe has spent more than five years reporting on poverty and economic justice in the Magnolia State and has received national recognition for her work. She will give participants a behind-the-scenes look at her experience reporting on the stateβs βrestitution centersββwhat she terms βdebtorsβ prisons.β
In addition to Wolfe, other speakers and topics include:
βDuwayne Burnside, Mississippi Blues singer, discussion and performance of Hill Country blues.
βDavid Garraway, ΊΪΑΟΙη Television Center director, creative and engaging video storytelling.
βJonathan Harris, Northern Gulf Institute outreach coordinator, and Tonya Hays, award-winning playwright and ΊΪΑΟΙη assistant professor of communication, their original play focusing on the subject of climate change and its potential impacts on the Gulf Coast region.
βZach Lancaster, a core crew member for HGTVβs βHome Town,β will talk about the television production.Μύ
ΜύβRick Looser, nationally known public relations professional, overturning stereotypes through his Mississippi Believe It! campaign.Μύ
βFrancine Reynolds, artistic director at New Stage Theatre in Jackson, what makes Mississippi history a perfect subject for theatre.
βBenjamin Saulsberry, tour coordinator at the Emmett Till Interpretive Center in Sumner, how the Emmett Till Memorial Commission is working to create racial harmony.
βSteve Soltis, senior adviser with MAS Leadership Communication and former communication executive for the Coca-Cola Company and UPS, roundtable discussion on the storytelling side of marketing. Soltis will be joined by Paul Summers, winemaker at Knightβs Gambit Vineyards in Charlottesville, Virginia; Benjamin West, Europe brand director at Veuve Clicquot; andΒ Derek Irby and Jean Mohammadi-Aragh Irby, founders of Mayhew Junction Brewery.
βRyan Starrett, author of βDallas Tough: Historic Tales of Grit, Audacity and Defiance,β stories of the dead.Μύ
βMichael Williams, writer, director and cinematographer, the creative process of video production.
Additionally, the communication department has invited undergraduate students from universities and colleges around the state to submit original nonfiction writing, podcasts and short documentary films as part of a Story State Storytelling Competition. Three of these submissions will receive Master Storyteller awards during the event.
Part of ΊΪΑΟΙηβs College of Arts and Sciences, the Department of Communication is online at .
ΊΪΑΟΙη is Mississippiβs leading university, available online at .