[AIW] 2019-2020 American Indian & Indigenous Studies Seminar Series, D'Arcy McNickle Center for American Indian and Indigenous Studies, Newberry Library, Chicago, IL/USA

AIW - Bartl bartl at american-indian-workshop.org
Thu Oct 31 12:05:34 CET 2019


 

The D'Arcy McNickle Center for American Indian and Indigenous Studies
is pleased to announce


The 2019-2020 American Indian & Indigenous Studies Seminar Series


3:30 pm to 5:00 pm, Baskes Boardroom

The Newberry Library / 60 West Walton Street / Chicago, IL 60610

November 7, 2019
“We Came to Fight a Black Snake"
Cynthia-Lou Coleman, Portland State University

December 5, 2019 

“Creating American Boundaries: Federalism and Dispossession ”

Craig Green, Temple University Beasley School of Law 


January 9, 2020

“Indian Homes and Indian Loans: The Housing Bubble, Suburban Indians, & the Section 184 Home Loan Program, 1990s-2010s ”

Kasey Keeler (Tuolumne MeWuk/Citizen Potawatomi), University of Wisconsin 


February 6, 2020

“Provincializing Treaties: Ella Cara Deloria and Vince Deloria Jr. on Relations and Responsibility"

David Myer Temin, University of Michigan 


March 5, 2020

“'Bound to bring a good harvest': The Apostle Islands Indian Pageant ”

Katrina Phillips (Red Cliff Band of Lake Superior Chippewa), Macalester College 


April 2, 2020

“Caribbean Natives and the Age of Revolution: The Case of St Vincent”

Nathaniel Millett, St. Louis University


May 14, 2020 

“Infected Assimilators: Tuberculous Health Seekers in the Indian Service” 

Juliet C. Larkin-Gilmore, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign


June 4, 2020

“The Cherokee King: Escotchaby of Coweta & Creek-Cherokee Wars, 1740s-1750s” 

Bryan Rindfleisch, Marquette University 


All papers are pre-circulated electronically.

If you plan to attend, contact  <mailto:scholarlyseminars at newberry.org> scholarlyseminars at newberry.org for a copy. 


Our series begins on November 7 with a paper by Cynthia-Lou Coleman:

   <https://go.newberry.org/image/Coleman.jpg> We Came to Fight a Black Snake

Cynthia-Lou Coleman, Portland State University

The manuscript explores discourse surrounding a bitter dispute that erupted in 2016 over the construction of a crude oil pipeline in the United States. The pipeline, called the black snake by detractors, would run more than one-thousand miles from North Dakota to Illinois. Objections to the Dakota Access Pipeline (DAPL) caught fire when its path was rerouted from the city of Bismarck to course instead under the Standing Rock Sioux Tribe’s supply of water. Tribal members and their supporters set up camps near the construction site to oppose the pipeline, calling themselves water protectors, and eschewing the label of protestors. Discourse over the social movement was ignited by activists who seized the metaphorical megaphone and took control of the narrative by issuing their own news reports over social media, avoiding gatekeeping and censorship by mainstream writers and editors. Conventional media, in turn, were forced to attend to the activists’ messages of resistance.


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***

41st American Indian Workshop, April 01 – 04, 2020

 <https://www.american-indian-workshop.org/> Indigenous Shapes of Water

Department of Social and Cultural Anthropology, Faculty for the Study of Culture, Ludwig-Maximilians-University, Munich/Germany

CFP:  <https://www.american-indian-workshop.org/AIW41/AIW41-Water-Cf.pdf> https://www.american-indian-workshop.org/AIW41/AIW41-Water-Cf.pdf [Deadline: January 05, 2020]

***

42nd American Indian Workshop, 2021

Department of British and American Studies, European University Cyprus, Nicosia/Cyprus

***

43 rd American Indian Workshop, 2022

Esch-sur-Alzette/Luxembourg

***

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