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Monday, April 13, 2026
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The Daily Mississippian
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    Lauren Stokes talks job termination on the campus from which she was fired

    Lauren Stokes talks job termination on the campus from which she was fired

    Oxford Board of Alderman to revisit proposed public demonstration ordinance

    Oxford Board of Alderman to revisit proposed public demonstration ordinance

    Graduating seniors navigate unstable job market

    Graduating seniors navigate unstable job market

    Meet the student behind Cliff Johnson’s campaign for Congress

    Meet the student behind Cliff Johnson’s campaign for Congress

    ASB rings in new team, endorses attendance resolution

    ASB rings in new team, endorses attendance resolution

    Bye, myOleMiss! It’s time for a new Experience

    Bye, myOleMiss! It’s time for a new Experience

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    Parker McCollum unites the ‘Gold Chain Nation’ at the Pavilion

    Parker McCollum unites the ‘Gold Chain Nation’ at the Pavilion

    ‘The Super Mario Galaxy Movie’ is a standout celestial sequel

    ‘The Super Mario Galaxy Movie’ is a standout celestial sequel

    UM alumnus screens short film ‘The Story of Ben Williams’

    UM alumnus screens short film ‘The Story of Ben Williams’

    ‘The Drama’ masters the art of the dramedy

    ‘The Drama’ masters the art of the dramedy

    Matthew Burdine pushes his canoeing tours out into the Mississippi River

    Matthew Burdine pushes his canoeing tours out into the Mississippi River

    Chinese and Arabic flagship programs take the stage at annual talent showcase

    Chinese and Arabic flagship programs take the stage at annual talent showcase

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    Ole Miss completes sweep of LSU in wild Sunday contest

    Ole Miss completes sweep of LSU in wild Sunday contest

    Ole Miss Softball enters second half of SEC play after first conference wins

    Ole Miss Softball enters second half of SEC play after first conference wins

    Rebel softball shuts out Central Arkansas and Memphis, defeats Samford in midweek games

    Rebel softball shuts out Central Arkansas and Memphis, defeats Samford in midweek games

    What is the future for Ole Miss Baseball head coach Mike Bianco?

    What is the future for Ole Miss Baseball head coach Mike Bianco?

    Trump signs executive order regarding college sports

    Trump signs executive order regarding college sports

    College basketball transfer portal opens, what you need to know

    College basketball transfer portal opens, what you need to know

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    What loss has taught me, what you can learn from it, too

    What loss has taught me, what you can learn from it, too

    Students embrace seismic shifts in the energy drink market

    Students embrace seismic shifts in the energy drink market

    Hola! Ni hao! Namaste! Learning a second language opens many doors

    Hola! Ni hao! Namaste! Learning a second language opens many doors

    Daily Mississippian Staff 2025-26

    Life with Lenora: What’s the big deal about bathrooms?

    Not enough students care about ASB elections

    Not enough students care about ASB elections

    Diary of a Black girl: the art of finding your voice

    Redefining womanhood at the University of Mississippi

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    The cost of catastrophe: Effects of Winter Storm Fern linger

    The cost of catastrophe: Effects of Winter Storm Fern linger

    Landscape workers clear the way for campus regrowth

    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

    Baptist Memorial Hospital puts patient care first during historic storm

    Baptist Memorial Hospital puts patient care first during historic storm

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    • ° Associated Student Body
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    Lauren Stokes talks job termination on the campus from which she was fired

    Lauren Stokes talks job termination on the campus from which she was fired

    Oxford Board of Alderman to revisit proposed public demonstration ordinance

    Oxford Board of Alderman to revisit proposed public demonstration ordinance

    Graduating seniors navigate unstable job market

    Graduating seniors navigate unstable job market

    Meet the student behind Cliff Johnson’s campaign for Congress

    Meet the student behind Cliff Johnson’s campaign for Congress

    ASB rings in new team, endorses attendance resolution

    ASB rings in new team, endorses attendance resolution

    Bye, myOleMiss! It’s time for a new Experience

    Bye, myOleMiss! It’s time for a new Experience

  • Arts & Culture
    • All
    • ° Events
    • ° Features
    • ° Listicles
    • ° Reviews
    Parker McCollum unites the ‘Gold Chain Nation’ at the Pavilion

    Parker McCollum unites the ‘Gold Chain Nation’ at the Pavilion

    ‘The Super Mario Galaxy Movie’ is a standout celestial sequel

    ‘The Super Mario Galaxy Movie’ is a standout celestial sequel

    UM alumnus screens short film ‘The Story of Ben Williams’

    UM alumnus screens short film ‘The Story of Ben Williams’

    ‘The Drama’ masters the art of the dramedy

    ‘The Drama’ masters the art of the dramedy

    Matthew Burdine pushes his canoeing tours out into the Mississippi River

    Matthew Burdine pushes his canoeing tours out into the Mississippi River

    Chinese and Arabic flagship programs take the stage at annual talent showcase

    Chinese and Arabic flagship programs take the stage at annual talent showcase

  • Sports
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    • ° Baseball
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    • ° Cross Country
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    • ° Golf
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    Ole Miss completes sweep of LSU in wild Sunday contest

    Ole Miss completes sweep of LSU in wild Sunday contest

    Ole Miss Softball enters second half of SEC play after first conference wins

    Ole Miss Softball enters second half of SEC play after first conference wins

    Rebel softball shuts out Central Arkansas and Memphis, defeats Samford in midweek games

    Rebel softball shuts out Central Arkansas and Memphis, defeats Samford in midweek games

    What is the future for Ole Miss Baseball head coach Mike Bianco?

    What is the future for Ole Miss Baseball head coach Mike Bianco?

    Trump signs executive order regarding college sports

    Trump signs executive order regarding college sports

    College basketball transfer portal opens, what you need to know

    College basketball transfer portal opens, what you need to know

  • Opinion
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    • ° Ask a Philosopher
    • ° Diary of a Black Girl
    • ° From the Editorial Board
    • ° Lavender Letters
    • ° Letters to the editor
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    What loss has taught me, what you can learn from it, too

    What loss has taught me, what you can learn from it, too

    Students embrace seismic shifts in the energy drink market

    Students embrace seismic shifts in the energy drink market

    Hola! Ni hao! Namaste! Learning a second language opens many doors

    Hola! Ni hao! Namaste! Learning a second language opens many doors

    Daily Mississippian Staff 2025-26

    Life with Lenora: What’s the big deal about bathrooms?

    Not enough students care about ASB elections

    Not enough students care about ASB elections

    Diary of a Black girl: the art of finding your voice

    Redefining womanhood at the University of Mississippi

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    • ° Jordan Center Symposium
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    The cost of catastrophe: Effects of Winter Storm Fern linger

    The cost of catastrophe: Effects of Winter Storm Fern linger

    Landscape workers clear the way for campus regrowth

    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

    Baptist Memorial Hospital puts patient care first during historic storm

    Baptist Memorial Hospital puts patient care first during historic storm

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Amy McDowell ‘whispers’ sociological secrets in new book

McDowell speaks of her passion for sociology, her recent read and the journey that led her to where she is now.

Sara ZaleskibySara Zaleski
March 18, 2026
Reading Time: 4 mins read

Amy McDowell’s path to teaching was anything but traditional, shaped by unexpected turns and a passion for understanding people’s stories. The associate professor of sociology at the University of Mississippi released her latest book, “Whispers in the Pews: Evangelical Uniformity in a Divided America,” on March 10. 

The book employs ethnography — the immersive study of a group’s culture — and is based on an evangelical church in Oxford that describes itself as welcoming and inclusive. McDowell set out to find out whether this was true or not.

“I spent a lot of time with the community of churchgoers that I studied,” McDowell said in an interview with The Daily Mississippian. “Ethnography really means that you have to be embedded in the community that you study.”

Amy McDowell speaks at Off Square Books on March 18. Photo by Nataly Tello

McDowell spoke about the book in conversation with UM Professor of Anthropology and Southern Studies Jodi Skipper at an event hosted by Off-Square Books on Wednesday.

While she was publishing her dissertation and working as an assistant professor, McDowell collected ethnographic research from 2016 to 2019 that created a strong foundation for the book.

“Kathleen Blee, a renowned sociologist known for her work on ideological extremism, race and social movements, was my dissertation adviser,” McDowell said. “My dissertation areas were religion, culture, race and gender.”

McDowell explained how her research helps deepen understanding of why people “believe the things they do and make the choices they make.”

Common in sociology, McDowell uses pseudonyms to cover the true locations and names of the people involved in her research. She did use the name of the city, however, to encourage thoughtfulness.

“I studied a church community in Oxford, and in the book, I don’t hide that it was in Oxford,” McDowell said. “It made me feel more accountable, and that was hard.”

McDowell observed patterns of deflection and ignoring issues in church societies through the church she studied.

“People don’t express their doubts, opinions or their disagreements in church spaces,” McDowell said. “People really try not to talk about that stuff.”

Although writing her book was challenging, it left her feeling fulfilled and confident.

“You get to help people feel like they’re in the room with you,” McDowell said.

McDowell never imagined she would become a professor. At 18 years old, she ran a small record store in Pensacola, Fla., and pictured she would end up in music rather than education.

“I didn’t take a very traditional path,” McDowell said. “I felt that I would do something in music distribution or work in some way in the music industry.”

A first-generation college student, McDowell earned master’s and doctoral degrees in sociology at the University of Pittsburgh. She started as an assistant professor at the University of Mississippi in 2014 and was promoted to associate professor in 2020. 

Mary Rogers, a sociology professor at the University of West Florida who died in 2009, inspired McDowell to pursue a sociology degree. Rogers encouraged McDowell to finish her undergraduate degree at the University of Colorado, Colorado Springs. 

“(Rogers) kind of helped me put together pieces of things I had been thinking about but had never heard articulated in quite that way,” McDowell said. 

McDowell strives to make a difference as a college teacher like Rogers did. Kennedy Marrs, a junior Southern Studies major, has already noticed McDowell’s impact this semester.

“She’s a great listener, and she wants us to be engaged in the content,” Marrs said. “She wants us to enjoy our time with the material, which I think is inspiring.” 

For McDowell, teaching courses on gender and sexuality felt like the beginning of a deeper involvement.

“I had a lot of students who were queer, some of them were from Mississippi, who were deeply sad and angry,” McDowell said. “I still think about a couple students.” 

These students inspired her role as director of the Queer Mississippi Histories Project.

One of McDowell’s colleagues, Jessie Wilkerson, an associate professor of American history at the University of Tennessee, Knoxville, had oral history students who wanted to do a project on LGBTQ+ people in Mississippi. That project led to allocating funding for creating an archive supporting oral history research.

“Fairly quickly, there was a lot of attention to this archive,” McDowell said.

McDowell describes the stories that her students have recorded for the Queer Mississippi Histories Project as “inspirational and powerful.” They can be accessed online on eGrove.

McDowell went on to build a class, called “Queer Mississippi” with UM Associate Professor of History Eva Payne. The class gives undergraduate and graduate students the chance to gain experience in historical research methods.

“It was a collaborative effort. It’s never been a solo show,” McDowell said. 

Graduate student Zoe Rees enrolled in McDowell’s Queer Mississippi course in fall 2024. 

“I expected an engaging academic experience,” Rees said. “What I did not anticipate was how profoundly she would shape my graduate career and personal growth. I wholeheartedly recommend Dr. McDowell as a professor and mentor. Studying under her has been one of the most significant and rewarding experiences of my graduate education.” 

McDowell said juggling her different roles has been enjoyable but not perfect.

“I drop the ball all the time,” McDowell said. “Actually, I find the process of writing painful, as a lot of people do, but at the same time, I like taking data and trying to make sense of what is going on.”

McDowell made a promise to herself to make more time for writing in 2026, continuing work that she knows can be difficult yet deeply meaningful. 

“I miss (making sense of the data), and I want to get it back,” McDowell said. “That’s kind of my promise to myself this year — to make more time for that.”

Tags: Amy McDowellSquare BooksWhisper in the Pews
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