News

Categories:News & Events

“49ers Football: The Impact on Town and Gown” will explore UNC Charlotte’s newest sport, as part of theSports in the New South: Culture, Color and Cash lecture series presented by the Center for the Study of the New South in the College of Liberal Arts & Sciences. The Tuesday, August 27 panel discussion at UNC Charlotte […]

Categories:News & Events

Without Sanctuary Conference The Center for the Study of the New South, in collaboration with the Levine Museum of the New South, issued a call for papers related to lynching in America and the South in particular, with abstracts due by June 1, 2012. The exhibit of lynching photographs, Without Sanctuary, will be at the […]

Categories:News & Events

The Center for the Study of the New South, in collaboration with J. Murrey Atkins Library, will convene a panel discussion on Charlotte, The New South, and the Democratic Convention on Tuesday, October 4, 2011, in Atkins 125 (First Floor) at 3:00. Panel members are contributors to Charlotte, NC, The Global Evolution of a New South […]

Categories:News & Events

On Thursday, April 14 at 6:00 PM at the Levine Museum of the New South, 200 E. Seventh St., UNC Charlotte’s Center for the Study of the New South presents: Nell Irvin Painter, the Edwards Professor of American History, Emerita, Princeton University, and author of “The History of White People.” This event will be followed by a […]

Categories:News & Events

Dr. Derek H. Alderman, East Carolina University Professor of Geography, delivered a lecture at the Levine Museum of the New South entitled “New South or Same Old South: The Politics of Naming Streets after Martin Luther King.”

Categories:News & Events

Lecture by Dr. Bill Graves, UNC Charlotte Geography and Earth Sciences Department

Categories:News & Events

Lecture by Dr. John David Smith, Charles H. Stone Professor, UNC Charlotte History Department

Categories:News & Events

Dr. Karen L. Cox, UNC Charlotte History Department, “Selling Moonlight and Magnolias: The South in Advertising,1890-1940”.

Categories:News & Events

Dr. Sonya Ramsey, UNC Charlotte History Department “The Best That We Could Give: Recollections and Reflections on the Lives of Southern Teachers” a discussion of Reading, Writing and Segregation: A Century of Black Women Teachers in Nashville (University of Illinois Press, 2008)