Afleveringen
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Jennifer Loren and LeeAnn Dreadfulwater are the force behind the Cherokee Nation’s film office, Cherokee Film, including the Emmy-winning docuseries, Osiyo, Voices of the Cherokee People. Their work is creative and critical, and fundamentally historical. “The stories that we’re telling now are archival. Nobody will ever be able to say, ‘we don’t know,’ because we’re doing this.” Join us for a conversation about filmmaking, narrative sovereignty, and creating a historical archive on film.
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Growing up Indigenous in California shaped Allison Herrera’s identity, fueling her passion for journalism, particularly on Indigenous Affairs. Join us for a discussion about Allison’s deep family ties, her work in documentary filmmaking, and the impacts of her investigative reporting in the Midwest and Southern Plains, including Oklahoma.
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Zijn er afleveringen die ontbreken?
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A specialist in Native American culture and history, Eric Singleton has curated exhibitions on Cherokee ledger art, Brummett Ecohawk in WWII, and the world-famous Spiro Mounds. He has led the National Cowboy & Western Heritage Museum’s ethnology department for ten years. Join him in conversation with Professor David D’Andrea for insights into world travels, curatorial careers, NAGPRA and cultural legislation, and more.
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Hannibal Johnson is a Tulsa-based author and public figure committed to bringing the history of African Americans in Oklahoma to wider audiences and to weaving history and social justice together. That work led to appointments to the 1921 Tulsa Race Massacre Centennial Commission and to its world-class history center, Greenwood Rising. That future, though, was not necessarily foreseen when growing up in small-town Arkansas.
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Raised in Oklahoma by a single mother, Sarah Kirk--a self-described homebody—liked to stay close but also couldn’t shake the urge to go far. By age 16 she was in Germany all on her own attending German high school. Two years later she was back in Oklahoma studying Europe and medieval studies at OSU. How can we feel fulfilled when we can't stay at home and be away exploring at the same time? Sarah sees studying history as one solution.
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Doug Miller played his first professional gig with his high school band at a ballroom in Iowa. He grew up ready to make-or-break it in the music industry and moved to the Twin Cities—an indie rock capital—to pursue that dream. But the experience ended up turning him into a historian. So what happened?