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    Lafayette County residents file appeal to thwart asphalt plant construction at the industrial park

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    University of Mississippi student Walker Fendley dead at 19

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    UM has champagne problems from graduation photo trends

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    Lafayette County Board of Supervisors denies locals’ attempt to rezone planned asphalt plant site

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    Rich Gentry named dean of School of Business Administration

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    Student songwriters stun at Proud Larry’s showcase

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    Seniors share their bucket lists for their final days in Oxford

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    Chef Irish: Meet the woman bringing Filipino food to Oxford

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    Ole Miss concludes track and field season at NCAA championships

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    Ole Miss pitchers ran out of gas against Troy

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    Ole Miss Baseball’s season ends against Troy in College World Series

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    Rebel baseball faces Troy in elimination game

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    Column: Ole Miss Baseball needs a few changes for success in Omaha

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    You might lose friends after you graduate — and that’s okay

    You might lose friends after you graduate — and that’s okay

    Wear the history, not just the fabric: Appreciating South Asian culture on campus

    Wear the history, not just the fabric: Appreciating South Asian culture on campus

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    Registering for classes was not a good ‘experience’

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    Meet a lineman who brought power back to Oxford

    Meet a lineman who brought power back to Oxford

    ‘Everyone is your neighbor in a disaster’: Churches step up during crisis

    ‘Everyone is your neighbor in a disaster’: Churches step up during crisis

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    Kindness on wheels: Facebook moms rally around young rescue driver

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    Lafayette County residents file appeal to thwart asphalt plant construction at the industrial park

    Lafayette County residents file appeal to thwart asphalt plant construction at the industrial park

    University of Mississippi student Walker Fendley dead at 19

    University of Mississippi student Walker Fendley dead at 19

    UM has champagne problems from graduation photo trends

    UM has champagne problems from graduation photo trends

    Lafayette County Board of Supervisors denies locals’ attempt to rezone planned asphalt plant site

    Lafayette County Board of Supervisors denies locals’ attempt to rezone planned asphalt plant site

    Rich Gentry named dean of School of Business Administration

    Rich Gentry named dean of School of Business Administration

    Are student workers paid enough? coping with the growing gap between wages and the cost of living

    Scott Colom seeks to become first Democrat to win a U.S. senate election in Mississippi since 1982

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    Omaha: where to go and what to do beyond baseball 

    Omaha: where to go and what to do beyond baseball 

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    Kacey Musgraves searches for a new sound in ‘Middle of Nowhere’

    Student songwriters stun at Proud Larry’s showcase

    Student songwriters stun at Proud Larry’s showcase

    Seniors share their bucket lists for their final days in Oxford

    Seniors share their bucket lists for their final days in Oxford

    Chef Irish: Meet the woman bringing Filipino food to Oxford

    Chef Irish: Meet the woman bringing Filipino food to Oxford

    Professionally dress and fashionably impress: Who are UM’s most stylish professors? 

    Professionally dress and fashionably impress: Who are UM’s most stylish professors? 

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    Ole Miss concludes track and field season at NCAA championships

    Ole Miss concludes track and field season at NCAA championships

    Ole Miss pitchers ran out of gas against Troy

    Ole Miss pitchers ran out of gas against Troy

    Ole Miss Baseball’s season ends against Troy in College World Series

    Ole Miss Baseball’s season ends against Troy in College World Series

    Rebel baseball faces Troy in elimination game

    Rebel baseball faces Troy in elimination game

    Column: Ole Miss Baseball needs a few changes for success in Omaha

    Column: Ole Miss Baseball needs a few changes for success in Omaha

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    Ole Miss offense struggles to find rhythm against North Carolina

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    You don’t have to dress nicely for class to express yourself

    Teacher evaluations are important: Why disregard them when it matters most?

    Teacher evaluations are important: Why disregard them when it matters most?

    You might lose friends after you graduate — and that’s okay

    You might lose friends after you graduate — and that’s okay

    Wear the history, not just the fabric: Appreciating South Asian culture on campus

    Wear the history, not just the fabric: Appreciating South Asian culture on campus

    Registering for classes was not a good ‘experience’

    Registering for classes was not a good ‘experience’

    Pick up a paper: Student media matters

    Pick up a paper: Student media matters

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    The cost of catastrophe: Effects of Winter Storm Fern linger

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    Landscape workers clear the way for campus regrowth

    Meet a lineman who brought power back to Oxford

    Meet a lineman who brought power back to Oxford

    ‘Everyone is your neighbor in a disaster’: Churches step up during crisis

    ‘Everyone is your neighbor in a disaster’: Churches step up during crisis

    Kindness on wheels: Facebook moms rally around young rescue driver

    Kindness on wheels: Facebook moms rally around young rescue driver

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    Baptist Memorial Hospital puts patient care first during historic storm

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‘I want them to be present:’ Jesmyn Ward shares overlooked stories of Mississippians

bySydney Stepp
September 11, 2024
Reading Time: 3 mins read
Jesmyn Ward
Photo courtesy: Beowulf Sheehan

Two-time National Book Award for Fiction-winner Jesmyn Ward will be in conversation with author LeVar Burton Saturday, Sept. 14 at the Mississippi Book Festival in Jackson, Miss. 

Before she was a nationally acclaimed novelist, Ward was the 2010-2011 John and Renée Grisham Writer in Residence at the University of Mississippi. 

The UM Masters of Fine Arts in English website describes Grisham Writers in Residence as “emerging writers selected on the strength of their writing.” The writers have no official duties other than teaching one class per semester and writing, though they often become an essential member of the MFA community.

Ward explained why she found Oxford and UM important to the literary community.

“One of the things that I really loved about Oxford when I was there as the Grisham writer was that sense of community that there is between writers and the people in the English department,” she said. “But then also with the great bookstores in the area.”

The Mississippi Book Festival is a stop on her tour promoting the paperback version of her most recent release, a work of historical fiction titled “Let Us Descend.” Released in October 2023, the novel addresses the pain that enslaved people in the United States endured.

This will not be Ward’s first appearance at the Mississippi Book Festival.

“One of the first events that I did at the Mississippi Book Festival was a panel that was tied into ‘The Fire This Time,’ which was a collection that I edited. … It was a group of amazing writers,” Ward said. “I love being able to meet other writers who take part in the festival and be a part of that community.”

Joining Ward onstage at the Mississippi Book Festival is LeVar Burton, host of the children’s television show “Reading Rainbow,” which aired from 1983 to 2006.

Ward expressed her love for the readers that come to the Mississippi Book Festival.

“I really love the audience too, because they’re so excited to be there; they’re really invested in taking part in the events, and witnessing the events and asking questions,” Ward said

Ward hails from DeLisle, Miss., and works to create clear images of the South in her writing; this is a contrast to the pastoral romanticization often associated with traditional Southern novels such as “Gone with the Wind.”

“I wanted to write about the kind of people that I grew up with, the kind of people who are in my family and the kind of people that I was surrounded by in Mississippi in part because I didn’t really see those people in literature when I was growing up,” Ward said. “I wanted to write their stories because I wanted them to be present in the world of fiction and creative nonfiction.”

When asked about how living and growing up in the South impacts her writing, she emphasized how maintaining her relationship with the South is integral to telling a clear story of her community.

“I think one of the reasons that it’s important for me to nurture and maintain the roots that I have in Mississippi, both in my hometown and just around the state in general, is because I feel like maintaining those roots and those connections enables me to be more honest and clear eyed in my work,” Ward said. “I think if I didn’t maintain those roots and didn’t maintain those connections, that it would be easier for me to sort of gloss over the realities of what it’s like to live in Mississippi.”

While her most recent novel depicts the horrors of slavery, her previous novels, “Where the Line Bleeds,” “Salvage the Bones” and “Sing, Unburied, Sing,” detail experiences of growing up and residing in Mississippi. Ward writes on topics such as drug addiction, the Parchman Mississippi State Penitentiary and the devastation that followed Hurricane Katrina.

Ward says that she ultimately wants to have a hand in giving young Southerners a space in literary fiction.

“Literature can make you feel a little bit less alone in whatever you’re living through. … It can give you a blueprint, or key, to better understand and move through your own life,” Ward said. “I hope that when students read my work … it helps them navigate their own lives.”

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