91少女集中营

Skip navigation

Honors College

Colloquium 26-27

Page Content

Required for all first-year Honors College students, this two-semester sequence lays the foundation for your development as an Honors Scholar. Focused on a common theme, this class will encourage you to think creatively, be curious and investigative, and ask rich and complex questions. 

In the belief that action and experience are a critical part of the learning process, Honors Colloquium embraces the principles of 鈥渁ctive learning.鈥 In that spirit, all classes take a required active-learning trip during Fall Break; travel costs, accommodations, tickets, and some meals will be paid for by the Honors College.

HON 111 (Fall)

In HON 111, you will learn how to encounter and interact with different kinds of writing and texts; how to become a better analytical reader; how to collaborate with your fellow scholars; how to engage in academic debate and discourse; and how to improve your communication skills, both written and oral.

HON 112 (Spring)

In HON 112, we will go from a focus on asking questions to a focus on answering them. While you continue to hone the skill of asking rich and rewarding questions, you will also begin developing the tools you need to find answers. In short, in HON 112 you will learn how to undertake 鈥渞esearch,鈥 broadly defined, what research looks like in various disciplines, the ethics of research, and how research develops organically.

Colloquium 27-27 decorative-banner

Once we begin to recognize the ubiquitousness of patterns as we go about our daily lives, there is a certain pleasure in our ability to recognize, study, recreate, and even disrupt these patterns.

Our DNA is made up of complex patterns of nucleotides, which generate the patterns of proteins that make everything about us. Languages all over the world are actually patterns involving both phonetic sounds and predictable, grammatical rules. Historians often talk about history as being cyclical and patterned, often destined to repeat. Natural ecosystems are made up of cycles that repeat themselves over and over again. Financial markets rely on trend following and patterns to help us understand stability, risk, and economic health. And in today鈥檚 modern world, we need look no further than artificial intelligence to evaluate the ways machine learning is built on the very notion of what it means to recognize and emulate patterns.

Across its various sections, Honors Colloquium 2026-2027 will examine the concept of 鈥減atterns鈥 through interdisciplinary lenses meant to help us identify and explore the various ways patterns make up our experiences and shape how we learn, study, create, change, and interpret this world. Although each section of Colloquium will approach this topic differently and will make use of different texts, all sections will begin the year by reading, discussing, and writing about Samantha Harvey鈥檚 .

 

H001 MW 9:30 - 10:45
Framing Life鈥檚 Thresholds: Patterns in Life and Death
Professor Jennifer Peterson

Framing Life鈥檚 Thresholds: Patterns in Life and Death

This colloquium section will engage in a year-long study of the beginning and end of life. Birth and death are universal experiences that constitute the most basic pattern of human existence, and most people in history viewed them as mundane, even intimate events, as they witnessed home births or stood vigil over deceased loved ones. Yet for many people today these transitional moments have been sanitized, disappeared into medical spaces, and rendered far from familiar. From the earliest written texts, humans have been attempting to capture birth and death in writing: Gilgamesh confronts his own mortality in the decaying face of his deceased friend, Enkidu; medieval midwives inscribed birthing girdles with prayers for safety; William Wordsworth鈥檚 poems reach toward the mysterious realm of pre-existence; movies and television show us stylized, hazy scenes of labor; and millions of internet users seek assurance about the experience of dying on 鈥淒eathtok.鈥 Through scholarly and literary readings, guest speakers, and field research experiences, we will learn about the various discourses -- medical, legal, spiritual, and cultural -- that surround these transitional moments. We will pay special attention to the history and present-day experience of maternal-fetal medicine, where health outcomes often mirror existing patterns of racial and class disadvantage.

Throughout this colloquium, students will experiment with different modes of writing, culminating in a substantial and deeply-contextualized essay that engages with some aspect of birth or death. Practicing the skill of the braided narrative鈥攚hich spans journalistic, academic, and literary genres鈥攕tudents will interweave modes such as theory, research/data, personal narrative, and interview. Writing a substantive, braided essay will give students an enhanced ability to create thick description鈥攁n essential tool for future researchers as they convey context and meaning of the issues they write about. Additionally, writing in this mode will enhance students鈥 narrative competence, which has been identified as a key skill for both interpersonal relationships and success in fields like education and health professions, making them better able to listen, construct meaning from, and empathize with the experiences of others.

Potential Readings: Monica Casper, ; Olivia Clare Friedman, ; Paul Kalanithi, Jessica Mitford, Toni Morrison, ; Mary Roach; Richard W. Wertz and Dorothy C. Wertz

 

H002 MW 9:30 - 10:45 
Exploring Patterns and Worldviews through Storytelling
Professor Mary Sheffer

Exploring Patterns and Worldviews through Storytelling

As humans, we use stories to share experiences, ideas, histories, and emotions. Stories come in many varieties and styles鈥攁nd, yes, patterns鈥攁ll of which help us better understand and connect with each other. Fairy tales, novels, and movies tend to follow specific genre criteria that position their stories and our takeaway from those stories in very different ways.

In the fall semester, we will engage in critical discussions on how fairytales and animation bridge cultural and age barriers and explore key works from iconic animation studios like Disney and Universal. In the spring semester, we will continue to analyze how we explore our world through graphic memoirs and novels. By the end of the two semesters, we will have explored and investigated storytelling and its effects through creative projects and research investigations.  

Potential Readings: Virginia Evans, ; C.S. Lewis, ; Stephanie Kate Strohm, ; Serena Valentino, ; Jack Zipes, ; Jack Zipes, 

 

H003 TTH 11:00 - 12:15
Rules of the Game: On Playing, Breaking, and Rebuilding the World
Professor Craig Carey

Rules of the Game: On Playing, Breaking, and Rebuilding the World

This section of colloquium invites students to play and experiment鈥攖o learn how to see, read, write, feel, bend, break, and reverse engineer the deeper rules and patterns that structure 鈥渢he game of life.鈥 Moving across history, nature, technology, economics, literature, and politics, we will examine how different rules, structures, and materials paradoxically constrain and create the conditions for playing, breaking, and rebuilding the world around us. 鈥淚t is a happy talent to know how to play,鈥 Ralph Waldo Emerson writes, and our goal will be to learn how to play wisely, ethically, aesthetically, dialectically, collaboratively, and with an eye toward knowing and hacking the rules that shape our historical existence. So, from Karl Marx to AI, through fragile ecosystems and technical infrastructures, across novels, films, games, and other media, we will play and replay the world until we learn how to convert its glories and horrors into valuable lessons for personal, practical, and professional living.

By the end of our year together, students will have developed a deep understanding of systems, structures, and rules across different intellectual playgrounds, which they can then use to break through obstacles, make sense of an increasingly complex world, and level up their knowledge, critical thinking, and research skills. In the fall, we鈥檒l focus on the rules of nature, perception, games, and the visual world; in the spring, we鈥檒l turn to social, economic, bureaucratic, and artificial structures. The course will include guided discussions, exploratory projects, creative teamwork, and research investigations geared toward students鈥 interests.

Potential Readings/Films/Games:  Philip Ball, ; Susanna Clarke, ; Maggie Gram, ; Frank Lanz, ; Karl Marx, 鈥淭he Fetishism of Commodities and the Secret thereof鈥; C. Thi Nguyen, ; Richard Powers, ; Nick Sousanis, ; Nick Srnicek, ; Yanis Varoufakis, ;  (dir. Jean Renoir);  (dir. Orson Welles);  (dir. Jacques Tati);  (dir. Wes Anderson); ;  (Sam Barlow).

 

H004 TTH 11:00 - 12:15
Patterns of Expression: Communication, Art, and Human Meaning-Making
Professor Colbey Penton

Exploring Patterns and Worldviews through Storytelling

This section of colloquium examines patterns in how humans create meaning and communicate. Together, we will explore the cultural, historical, and institutional factors shaping our communicative expressions and whether they are short-lived or endure. Drawing from behavioral science, social psychology, neuroscience, art history, literary studies, and religious history, we will ask some of the following questions: What do we express? How do we express it? What happens when expression is suppressed?

In the fall, we will examine the science and psychology of communication and behavioral research on first impressions, trust, and presence. We will also study nonverbal communication: microexpressions, posture, silence, and gestures that often convey more than words. The art of conversation will center this semester, as we explore how genuine connection is made, sustained, and sometimes lost. Students will analyze and practice communication patterns and expand their expressive range through observation and exchange.

In the spring semester, we will focus on understanding how artists use patterns in visual art, poetry, music, and dance to express emotions. Our goals are to analyze how these patterns help convey emotions across traditions, to investigate how bodily patterns and nervous system rhythms influence our engagement with art and one another, and to critically examine the forces that have suppressed certain voices or artistic expressions throughout history.

Through guided discussions, reflective writing, creative projects, and research, we will develop skills in close reading, critical analysis, multimodal expression, and research. Ultimately, students will gain a richer vocabulary for their emotional lives, a sharper eye for patterns in their experiences, and a deeper understanding of why expanding human expression is quietly radical.

Lisa Feldman Barrett,  (selections); John Berger, ; Marc Brackett, ; Olivia Fox Cabane, ; Deb Dana, ; Adam Grant, ; Daniel Kahneman, (selections); Karen L. King, ; Daniel J. Levitin, ; Kate Murphy, ; Mary Oliver, ; Elaine Pagels, ; Marshall Rosenberg, ; Rick Rubin, ; Vanessa Van Edwards, ; Ocean Vuong, ; David Bayles and Ted Orland, ; Bessel van der Kolk,  (selections)

 

H005 TTH 11:00 - 12:15
Leading by Design
Professor Candice Salyers

Leading by Design banner

In this section of Colloquium, we will explore how leadership creates, reinforces, and disrupts patterns鈥攕ystems of behavior, cycles of power, and grammars of possibility鈥攐n individual, communal, national, and international levels. Approaching leadership as action and affect, rather than as a position or title, we will consider how those entrusted with leadership responsibilities balance accountability and service, meet the needs of diverse populations, navigate challenges in decision making, and pursue justice and transformation. By analyzing divergent ways of using or sharing power, developing relationships, and establishing structures of support or repression, we will identify leadership patterns to learn from, participate in, or challenge.

Our efforts this year will include investigating the work of individuals breaking traditional patterns to engage in creative leadership that addresses urgent issues facing humanity in novel ways. We will read texts by authors from around the world, consider the contexts in which they were compelled to lead, harvest insights their work can offer us as scholars and citizens, and experiment with leadership practices in our own lives.

Potential Readings: Chinua Achebe,  Jacinda Arden,Rutger Bregman; Brene Brown, Susan Cain; L. David Marquet, ; Roger Martin,Greg McKeown and Liz Wiseman, Rosa Parks, Simon Sinek, ; Amy Wallace and Ed Catmull, ; David Zirin, 

 

H006 MW 2:30 - 3:45
Patterns of Civilization: The Rhythms of Humanity
Professor Jacob Cotton

Exploring Patterns and Worldviews through Storytelling

鈥淗istory doesn鈥檛 repeat itself, but it often rhymes.鈥 鈥 Will Durant

 

This course examines the recurring patterns that shape human civilizations across time. From early societies to the modern world, students will explore how cultures form, expand, adapt, and sometimes collapse. Rather than treating history as a series of isolated events, the course approaches it as a set of recognizable structures and systems that repeat in different forms.

 

Through a combination of historical narrative, data-driven analysis, and reflective writing, students will examine how patterns emerge in areas such as cultural development, technological advancement, economic systems, and collective human behavior. Readings will range from broad histories of human civilization to contemporary analyses of global trends, as well as speculative fiction that imagines the future trajectory of society.

 

Students will be asked to identify, analyze, and question the patterns that define civilizations across time, drawing connections between past and present while considering how current trends may shape the future.

 

Isaac Asimov, ; Will Durant, ; Michael Easter, The Comfort Crisis; EH Gombrich, ; John Green, ; Neil Howe, ; Hans Rosling, ; Emily St. John Mandel,

 

 

H007 MW 9:30 - 10:45
A Tiger in the Grass
Professor Don Yee

Tiger in the Grass banner

The Alien: 鈥淚 don鈥檛 play him as an alien, actually. I play him as a metaphor. That鈥檚 my interpretation.鈥

Augie: 鈥淢etaphor for what?鈥

The Alien: 鈥業 don鈥檛 know yet. We don鈥檛 pin it down.鈥       

Asteroid City (2023)

Humans are pattern seekers. The culmination of countless biological processes and events has led us to imagine unique and meaningful configurations of the world around us. We 鈥渟ee鈥 faces in everyday objects, perceive shapes of animals in clouds, and see ancient buildings on Mars. We also recognize patterns in our choices and actions, such as when we wear our lucky socks thinking that they influence the outcome of the game.

This innate desire to make sense of the shapes and events in our lives often brings meaning to an otherwise chaotic and unpredictable world. However, the same desire to find patterns comes at a cost, as we are often wrong and find that there is less meaning in the patterns we saw than we initially attributed to what we saw as a pattern, or we take action to address problems that don鈥檛 exist. Of course, as humans, we also sometimes miss patterns that desperately need to be addressed.

This section of Colloquium will build off the idea of the tiger in the grass; seeing one when there is none versus missing the one that exists. In HON 111 we鈥檒l explore situations where our need to find patterns led us astray and resulted in harm to others. In HON 112 we鈥檒l investigate individuals and situations that suggested a real tiger in the grass and the ramifications that come when society resists accepting the tiger鈥檚 presence. Through a blend of reading and formal discussion, in class projects, and a healthy dose of film viewing, students will begin to answer the questions that surround the how and why of the patterns we see and those that we miss.

Potential Readings: Emerson W. Baker, F. R. Maher,Kier-La Janisse, ; Larry Tye

 

H008 TTH 11:00 - 12:15
Patterns of Human Development
Professor Rebecca Tuuri

Patterns of Human Development

What are patterns in human development that influence the ways people learn and grow, from their birth to death? How are intelligence and sociability related (or not) to sequence recognition?

In the fall semester, we will consider the role that patterns have played in an individual human鈥檚 evolution, self-understanding, language, perception of others, and creativity. We will also reflect on how AI mimics, aids, exploits, or fails at reflecting human patterns. In the spring semester, we will consider what type of patterns are created by human beings collectively. In this later semester, we will explore religion, sociology, and history to consider the degree to which human action echoes throughout time. We will also examine the limitations of pattern recognition as a way to prevent collective actions of human cruelty and destruction and seek to find new methods to prevent such violence.

Potential Readings: Jennifer Eberhardt, John Green,; George Lakoff, ; Rick Rubin, Neil Shubin, ; William Sturkey, ; Michel-Rolph Trouillot, 

 

Archives

 

Contact Us

Honors College
Honor House
118 College Drive #5162
Hattiesburg, MS 39406

91少女集中营

Campus Map

Phone
601.266.4533