NAISIP Fall 2021 Working Group Seminar: Anton Treuer ’91

Date
Nov 11, 2021, 12:00 pm1:30 pm
Location
Scheide Caldwell House, Room 209

Speaker

Details

Event Description

As part of the Fall 2021 Working Group Seminars presented by the Native American and Indigenous Studies Initiative at Princeton (NAISIP), join celebrated Indigenous scholar and activist Anton Treuer ’91 for a look at the history and politics of truth and reconciliation in America with a window into the Indigenous experience.

Recent revelations of mass graves for Native students at residential schools in both Canada and the United States have sparked fresh conversation on America’s troubled treatment of the first Americans and the need for truth, reconciliation, and healing. Treuer, who spearheads a regional truth and reconciliation effort in Minnesota, has authored 20 books on Native American history, culture, and Indigenous language revitalization, and he is deeply involved in racial equity work across the country.

Open to members of the University community. Pre-registration is required, and in-person attendance will be capped at 20 participants. Registrations will be confirmed via email on a first come, first served basis. Registrants must be confirmed to attend. In the case of participant overflow, a Zoom link will be provided to registered attendees.

NAISIP fosters a cross-disciplinary dialogue among faculty, students, staff, and community members whose research and teaching interests focus on Indigenous peoples, and works to establish and maintain ethical partnerships with Indigenous communities. The NAISIP Working Group Seminar Series is a Collaborative Humanities Project of the Humanities Council. Cosponsored by the Fund for Canadian Studies; Program in American Studies; Center for Culture, Society and Religion; and the School of Historical Studies.

Sponsors
  • Native American and Indigenous Studies Initiative at Princeton
  • Humanities Council
  • Program in American Studies
  • Fund for Canadian Studies
  • Center for Culture, Society & Religion
  • School of Historical Studies, Institute for Advanced Study