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Press Release
Oct. 27, 2009 (Schedule)
SHI TO SPONSOR LECTURE SERIES FOR NATIVE AMERICAN MONTH
Sealaska Heritage Institute (SHI) will sponsor a noon lecture series
in November to celebrate Native American Month.
The brown-bag lunch series will focus on topics such as Native history
and languages, Native art and the statehood movement.
“Native people have such a rich history in Alaska, but much of it is not
taught in schools,” said SHI President Rosita Worl. “We hope to
highlight our history in November in honor of Native American Month.”
Tlingit leader Byron Mallott will give a lecture on Monday, Nov. 2, on
the development of Alaska Native corporations created under the Alaska
Native Claims Settlement Act and the efforts by Alaska Natives to
transform the corporations into “Native” institutions in the face of
Congress’ competing intent to assimilate Alaska Natives economically
through profit-making corporations. Mallott is the former CEO and
President of Sealaska Corporation and serves as a Fellow with the First
Alaskans Institute. He is the clan leader of the Kwaashk’i Kwáan
Clan of Yakutat.
Jeane Breinig will give a lecture on Wednesday, Nov. 4, on Southeast
Native perspectives on statehood. Breinig is an associate professor of
English at the University of Alaska Anchorage. Her teaching and research
areas include American Indian and Alaska Native literature, American
literature, and American ethnic literature. Her publications include
articles and books documenting Alaska Native oral histories. She is
Haida, originally from Kasaan, TáasLáanas, Raven Brown Bear.
Jordan Lachler will give a lecture on Tuesday, Nov. 10, on Tlingit,
Haida, and Tsimshian linguistic origins and relationships. Lachler is a
linguist at Sealaska Heritage Institute who specializes in Haida. He is
the editor of an upcoming Haida dictionary and phrasebook to be
published by Sealaska Heritage Institute.
Daniel Lee Henry will give a lecture on Tuesday, Nov. 17, on nineteenth
century encounters between Natives and non-Natives in Chilkat country.
Henry is an award-winning author, teacher and journalist based in the
Haines area. He has recorded numerous oral histories of Chilkat/Chilkoot
Tlingit Elders and is currently working on the book Dancing at Deer
Rock: Toward Community Among Warriors, a rhetorical history of land use
confrontation in the communities of the Northern Lynn Canal.
Wally Olson will give a lecture on Thursday, Nov. 19, on contact
between Alaska Natives and European explorers in the late nineteenth
century. Olson will show from specific events that most of the time the
explorers (not always the fur traders later) and Native people got along
well because it was a win-win situation. The explorers wanted
information, and the Natives wanted trade goods, so they were "pragmatic
partners." Olson is an author, a professor of Anthropology (Emeritus)
with the University of Alaska Southeast and a Fellow of the American
Anthropological Association.
Richard and Nora Marks Dauenhauer will give a lecture on Tuesday, Nov.
24, on relations between Russians and Tlingit from the 1790s through
1818, an era when Russians expanded into Southeast Alaska to take
control of the Northwest Coast fur trade. The Dauenhauers have written
numerous award-winning books on Native culture and history, including
Anóoshi Lingít Aaní Ká: Russians in Tlingit America, The Battles of
Sitka 1802 and 1804, winner of the American Book Award from the
Before Columbus Foundation.
The lectures will be held from 12-1 pm in the 4th floor
boardroom at Sealaska Plaza in Juneau. Attendees are invited to bring
their own lunch.
Sealaska Heritage Institute is a regional nonprofit representing the
Tlingit, Haida and Tsimshian people of Southeast Alaska. Its mission is
to perpetuate and enhance Tlingit, Haida and Tsimshian cultures.
CONTACT: Rosita Worl, SHI President, 463-4844
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