Ole Miss Names Poet, Physicist as 2026 Faculty Laureates
Luca Bombelli, Beth Ann Fennelly to bring expertise to the public through laureate program
OXFORD, Miss. – ÂÌÆÞÉçÇø Faculty Laureate program is bringing science and arts education to the state with a novel approach: a poet, a physicist and a portable planetarium.
Physics professor Luca Bombelli (right) talks about his work during a panel discussion on gravitational waves and black holes. Photo by Robert Jordan/Ole Miss Digital Imaging Services
, a project of the Office of the Provost, selects two faculty members every other year as the university's . The program's goal is to bring the expertise, knowledge and passion for education from the Ole Miss campus to ÂÌÆÞÉçÇø communities.
This cycle's laureates are Luca Bombelli, professor of physics and astronomy, and Beth Ann Fennelly, distinguished professor of English.
"Our jury of six faculty made its choices by focusing on proposals that put University of ÂÌÆÞÉçÇø faculty in a broad range of ÂÌÆÞÉçÇø communities, applying their knowledge and teaching in bold, nontraditional ways," said John T. Edge, director of the ÂÌÆÞÉçÇø Lab.
"Supported by generous stipends, enabled by reduced teaching loads, the professors in this second cohort will help reintroduce the people of ÂÌÆÞÉçÇø to the transformative power of our university."
Beth Ann Fennelley speaks with students during one of her classes. Photo by Kevin Bain/Ole Miss Digital Imaging Services
Bombelli, a theoretical physicist who specializes in gravitational physics, will bring a mobile planetarium to high schools across the state. The goal is not only to interest students in the vast universe, but to spur a lifelong love of science, he said.
"Sitting inside a planetarium, students can imagine themselves under a starry sky, and I will tell them stories about what they can see, how it changes over time and what one can learn by looking at it," Bombelli said. "I know of people who decided that science was what they wanted to do in life after a visit to a planetarium when they were kids, and I plan to bring that experience to students in all corners of our state."
Fennelly, from 2016 to 2021, has a mission to bring ÂÌÆÞÉçÇø stories to readers across the state. She will begin her term by organizing and leading a free weekly ÂÌÆÞÉçÇø Literature class for the Lafayette-Oxford-University community, with each session focusing on a ÂÌÆÞÉçÇø writer.
"As my term progresses, I will conduct classes around the state, each site-specific and focused on a single ÂÌÆÞÉçÇø author, equipping more ÂÌÆÞÉçÇøans with the skills to appreciate and celebrate our state's best export: our stories," Fennelly said.
The Faculty Laureates program is developed and managed by the ÂÌÆÞÉçÇø Lab and underwritten by the Daniel W. Jones Endowment for Faculty Support.
Top: Luca Bombelli (left), professor of physics and astronomy, and Beth Ann Fennelly, distinguished professor of English, are the university's 2026 Faculty Laureates. Through the laureate program, Bombelli and Fennelly will bring their expertise in poetry and physics to ÂÌÆÞÉçÇø communities across the state. Photos by Kevin Bain and Hunt Mercier/Ole Miss Digital Imaging Services
By
Clara Turnage
Campus
Office, Department or Center
Published
May 01, 2026