Browsing by Subject "Department of American Indian Studies"
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Item Aaniin Ezhiwebak (2015 Winter)(University of Minnesota Duluth, 2015) University of Minnesota Duluth. Department of American Indian StudiesItem Aaniin Ezhiwebak (2016 Winter)(University of Minnesota Duluth, 2016) University of Minnesota Duluth. Department of American Indian StudiesItem Aaniin Ezhiwebak (2017 Winter)(University of Minnesota Duluth, 2017) University of Minnesota Duluth. Department of American Indian StudiesItem Aaniin Ezhiwebak (2018 Winter)(University of Minnesota Duluth, 2018) University of Minnesota Duluth. Department of American Indian StudiesItem AILRC Spring Feast (2023-03-29)(2023) University of Minnesota Duluth. American Indian Learning Resource Center50th Anniversary of the American Indian Studies Department and the Indigenous Student Organization; 40th Anniversary of the American Indian Learning Resource Center; 10th Anniversity of the Tribal Sovereignty Institute; Speakers: Rachel Evangelisto, Hunkpapha Standing Rock Lakota Sioux, 86th Miss Minnesota, University of Minnesota Morris Alumni; Dennis Olson, Fond Du Lac Band of Lake Superior Chippewa, Commissioner for the Office of Higher Education, University of Minnesota Duluth AlumniItem American Indian Boarding School History (2022-11-17)(2022) University of Minnesota Duluth. American Indian Learning Resource CenterPresented by: Samuel B. Torres, The National Native American Boarding School Healing CoalitionItem American Indian Studies Newsletter (1988-05)(University of Minnesota, Duluth, 1988-05) University of Minnesota, Duluth. Department of American Indian StudiesItem Anika Fajardo Book Reading (2019-10-07)(2019) Fajardo, Anika; University of Minnesota Duluth. Department of American Indian StudiesWhere do I come from? (and does it matter?) This talk will highlight the identity issues surrounding birthplace (born in Columbia and raissed in Minnepolis), ethnicity, family history, and language as reflected by her 2019 memoir Magical Realism for Non-Believers: A Memoir of Finding Family. It will encourage reflection and discussion about who we are and where we come from and how those identities impact our perceptions of our place in the world.Item The Chippewa National Forest Isn't Just Another Forest, It is a Homeland (2021-02-04)(2021) Thompson, Douglas P; University of Minnesota Duluth. Department of American Indian StudiesThe Chippewa National Forest is the first national forest in the National Forest System created by statute and the only National Forest created with explicit provisions for the benefit of a Tribal Nation. Over time, this history has faded from the corporate and collective memory of the United States Forest Service. The understand [sic] of this singularly unique relationship has been reconstructed over recent years, requiring a recalibration of natural resource management activities and planning on one of the most intensively managed Forests in the National Forest system.Item A Conversation About Race in Minnesota (2021-03-19)(2021) Waziyatawin; Green, WilliamDeconstructing the history of race in MN with the goal of reparative action.Item Department of American Indian Studies Departmental Review (2017)(2017) University of Minnesota Duluth. Department of American Indian StudiesItem An Evening with Dr. Thomas Peacock (2023-04-12)(2023) University of Minnesota Duluth. Kathryn A. Martin LibraryItem Fact-Checking Feminism (2020-10-27)(2020) University of Minnesota Duluth. Office of Diversity and InclusionWhat is it about? The history of the women’s suffrage movement, its inaccuracies and the missing voices of Indigenous, Black, and other Women of Color. While the 19th amendment guaranteed women the right to vote, voter suppression laws continue to this day. Learn more about the speaker at https://sallyroeschwagner.com/ Select titles of Dr. Roesch Wagner’s books are available at the UMD Store.Item Fall Feast (2019-09-17)(2019) University of Minnesota Duluth. American Indian Learning Resource CenterWe are excited to be hosting a few Community and University based Organizations at our Feast this year, so everyone will have the opportunity to talk with them and learn more about what they do within the community and on campus! The organizations who will be present are: UMD's American Indian Science and Engineering Society; UMD's Indigenous Student Organization; Center for American Indian and Minority Health; Mash-ka-wisen (Thunderbird/Wren House); 1854 Treaty Authority; Strong Hearts Native HelplineItem The Family Decides: Locating Anishinaabe Laws of Belonging through Adoption Stories (2016-02-04)(2016) Lee, Damien; University of Minnesota Duluth. Department of American Indian StudiesFor generations, the Canadian state has forced Anishinaabeg to internalize racialized logics of determining who belongs with their nations, a process that continues to dis-member Anishinaabe communities through the pseudo-science of blood quantum. Damien Lee will discuss Anishinaabe customary adoption practices as a viable source of law through which Anishinaabe citizenship laws can be (re)considered.Item Finding Our Way with Native Literature (2020-02-07)(2020) Meland, Carter; University of Minnesota Duluth. Department of American Indian StudiesIn this presentation, novelist Carter Meland talks about the transformative power of Native literatures and what they mean to him as a teacher, a creative writer, and an Anishinaabe descendent seeking to make sense of his fractured family history.Item Finding our Way with Native Literature (a Return) (2021-04-08)(2021) Meland, Carter; University of Minnesota Duluth. Department of American Indian StudiesBlending poetry and critical reflections, this virtual talk engages with the truths in American Indian literature by looking at novels, oral stories, and rock art in an attempt to make sense of the Anishinaabe manidoo (spirit) of honesty, Bahwajinini, also known as Bigfoot in English. Filmed at sites around UMD and the North Shore, this presentation takes you out of the usual Zoom room and gets you out in the woods, down by the lake, or knee deep in the swamp.Item Geographic Indigenous Futures (2022-03-29)(2022) University of Minnesota Duluth. Department of American Indian StudiesDr. Smiles (Leech Lake Band of Ojibwe) will speak on his current work which seeks to draw connections between the ways that Indigenous nations protect cultural resources such as burial sites and other important spaces, and what this might mean for Indigenous political and cultural sovereignty in an era of climate crisis, especially for ‘more-than-human’ parts of the environment.Item Haudenosaunee Three Sisters Gardening and Seed Saving (2021-03-18)(2021) Webster, Rebecca MLearn about the cultural, historical, scientific, and political reasons why saving seeds from three sisters' gardens is crucial to Haudenosaunee food sovereignty