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51³Ō¹Ļ’s Anthony revises Mississippi history textbook for middle, high school students

51³Ō¹Ļ’s Anthony revises Mississippi history textbook for middle, high school students

Contact: Bethany Shipp

STARKVILLE, Miss.—As students return to classrooms this fall, a new textbook revised by a Mississippi State veteran educator sheds new light on the Magnolia State’s history.

Kenneth Anthony
Kenneth Anthony (Photo by Bryce Mitchell)

Kenneth Anthony, professor and head of 51³Ō¹Ļ’s Department of Teacher Education and Leadership, is the co-author of ā€œMississippi: Our History, Our Home,ā€ the most recent Mississippi history textbook adopted by the state for middle and high school students. The Clairmont Press book is a revision of the late David Sansing’s 2013 textbook, ā€œA Place Called Mississippi.ā€

ā€œIt’s important to revise history textbooks because over time, we have more information about the past and our understanding of events changes,ā€ Anthony said. ā€œThis revision was guided by what I learned from research I conducted about reconstruction narratives in older Mississippi history textbooks.ā€

Anthony’s book research also included visiting historical sites and museums across the state. He incorporated more primary sources directly into the text, drawing from Census data, maps from the Library of Congress and accounts compiled by Bradley Bond in ā€œMississippi: A Documentary History.ā€

ā€œOne role of a textbook author is to make decisions about what to change, what to keep and what to add,ā€ Anthony said. ā€œFor example, how do you decide which musicians to include? I went to an external authority, Rolling Stone Magazine, and used their list of the 10 greatest Mississippi artists and then validated the list by seeking feedback from Mississippi history teachers in the state.ā€

ā€œMississippi: Our History, Our Homeā€ book cover
(Photo by Bryce Mitchell)

Some of the ā€˜new’ history in the textbook includes the state flag adopted in 2021 and the state song ā€œOne Mississippiā€ adopted in 2022. The revision shines new light on Emmett Till’s story, documenting the false accusation that led to his lynching in 1955. It also includes new archaeology information about the earliest inhabited site in the state and expands the Civil War narrative, adding battles and engagements throughout Mississippi.

Anthony also broadened the chronicles of the state’s rich literary tradition to include Michael Farris Smith, who Anthony says is ā€œone of Mississippi’s most important contemporary writers.ā€ To bring things full circle, he added Sansing to the chapter of Mississippi writers, noting how Sansing himself broke history.

ā€œHe was the historian who wrote the first Mississippi history textbook that broke the dominant 80-year narrative about reconstruction,ā€ Anthony said. ā€œIt was my honor to add him to the textbook, especially given that I was revising his original work.ā€

Anthony holds a doctoral degree in secondary education from 51³Ō¹Ļ and a master’s degree in national security and strategic studies from the United States Naval War College. He also earned his master’s degree in gifted education and bachelor’s degree in history from Mississippi University for Women.

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