The Voices for a Just World Lecture Series continues with a guest whose work defies easy categorization. On February 11, 2026, Amanda Seales will appear at Tougaloo College, hosted by Mississippi for a Just World in partnership with Black With No Chaser.
Here’s why this matters.
1. She Expands What an Intellectual Looks Like
Amanda Seales insists that scholarship doesn’t have to be confined to classrooms or academic journals. With a Master’s degree in African American Studies and a career in comedy, media, and art, she embodies the idea that thinking, creating, and teaching can happen anywhere people are paying attention.
2. Humor Is Her Entry Point, Not the End Goal
Seales uses humor to disarm, not distract. Laughter becomes a gateway to deeper conversations about power, identity, and responsibility. In a moment when people are overwhelmed by heavy news cycles, her approach creates space to engage without disengaging.
3. She Practices Truth-Telling Without Softening the Message
Her radio show was once described as “too polarizing and not consistently funny.” She agreed. That response clarifies her commitment: truth comes before comfort. As an Artistic Intellectual, Seales prioritizes honesty over palatability, even when it costs her platform or approval.
4. Her Work Centers Civic Responsibility
From her documentary In Amanda We Trust to her ongoing media projects, Seales consistently ties culture to civic participation. She challenges audiences to move beyond commentary and toward action, reminding us that awareness without engagement is incomplete.
5. Tougaloo Is the Right Place for This Conversation
Tougaloo College has long been a site where critical dialogue and social courage intersect. Hosting Amanda Seales continues the institution’s legacy as a space where difficult questions are not avoided but examined. This setting grounds the conversation in history while pushing it forward.
6. She Bridges Generations and Platforms
With millions of followers online and decades of experience across television, radio, podcasts, and live performance, Seales reaches audiences across age groups and mediums. Her presence connects students, elders, organizers, and creatives in a shared dialogue about justice and culture.
7. She Models What It Means to Be in Practice
Like Angela Davis’s framing of freedom as a practice, Amanda Seales shows what it looks like to practice integrity daily. Through consistency, discipline, and refusal to dilute her values, she demonstrates that cultural work, like justice work, requires sustained commitment.
Amanda Seales’ appearance at Voices for a Just World is not about celebrity. It is about clarity. It is about engaging culture as a serious site of struggle and possibility. And it is about recognizing that the work of liberation often arrives through voices willing to challenge us to think, laugh, and act at the same time.
Event Details
Voices for a Just World: Amanda Seales
Wednesday, February 11, 2026
6:00–7:30 p.m. (Doors open at 5:30 p.m.)
The Historic Woodworth Chapel, Tougaloo College
Tougaloo, Mississippi
Registration: https://bit.ly/justvoices

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