NAISA Tenth Annual Meeting, May 17-19, 2018 Program 'Aweeshkore Xaa, 'Ekwaa'a Xaa (We Are Happy You Are Here)
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NAISA Tenth Annual Meeting, May 17-19, 2018 Program 'Aweeshkore xaa, 'ekwaa'a xaa (We are happy you are here) The American Indian Studies Center at University of California, Los Angeles and its Southern California co-hosts welcome NAISA, the largest scholarly organization devoted to Indigenous issues and research, to Yaanga (Downtown Los Angeles area) on the traditional, ancestral, and unceded territory of the Gabrieliño/Tongva. Los Angeles is home to the largest Indigenous populations in the US. It is our aim to highlight the incredibly rich landscape of Indigenous Los Angeles at NAISA 2018. Our meeting is set in downtown on what used to be the villages of Yaanga before Tongva dispossession. As the city grew, so did Indigenous populations in Los Angeles. Many American Indians, Latin American Indigenous peoples, Alaskan Natives, and Native Hawaiians have come to the rich land of the Gabrieliño/Tongva for a variety of reasons, whether it was from following the rich trade of sea otters, fishing or whaling, or being driven from their homes by the economic tyranny of federal Indian policy, or fleeing persecution of the Mexican government against Indigenous peoples. Many from the Pacific and Global South would follow and make Los Angeles their home. To learn more about the history of Tongva land and how these communities have made their home in LA, we invite you to visit Mapping Indigenous LA’s website where you will find storymaps and more information: https://mila.ss.ucla.edu. Extending out from LA and into the Southern California region, there are nineteen federally recognized tribes and hundreds more. We provide more information about the amazing community sites for you to visit on our conference website. Also, there are a plethora of culturally rich museums that hold important archives of Indigenous knowledge as well as contemporary work on the day before and after the conference. Many have opened their doors just for our scholarly community. Please also note the special UAII exhibit at These Days, a poetry event with acclaimed and award winning poets, and the artists who will be making new work during the conference at 118 Winston St. Graduate events will include hand games at the luncheon and a VIP Night out at club Nokia for Graduate student spaces! Today we meet as communities to learn from each other, devise anti-colonial strategies and ignite conversations about a decolonial future. NOTE ABOUT THIS PROGRAM This is the final program. It is print-ready and closed for changes. If you have to withdraw from the conference, please either contact the chair of your session directly or email the NAISA office at: [email protected]. Also use this email address to notify us of any errors you pick up regarding your session or presentation. Changes may be made to online versions of the program and noted on the website, but they will not be entered into this version of the program. WEDNESDAY 16 MAY You are welcome to join these local and pre-conference events Indigenous Education Pre-conference, UCLA Faculty Center. Participants need to preregister because space is limited. Contact: [email protected] or [email protected] Museum and Research Center Day: Free Admission to the following Museums when you show registration Info: The Autry Museum of the American West, The J. Paul Getty Museum (see website to sign up for Research Tour 2-4 pm) with Waived Parking, The Fowler Museum at UCLA will run a program “Working With Tribal Communties: Experiences From the Fowler” from 10am-12pm, and The Los Angeles County Museum of Natural History. 1 Panel THURSDAY 17 MAY 8:00 to 9:45 am – Boyle Heights Room 522 8:00 am to 6:00 pm Registration, Registration Desk, 5th Chair: Floor Keri Bradford, Choctaw Nation of Oklahoma 8:00 am to 5:00 pm Book Exhibits, Wilshire Grand, 5th Participants: Floor K'Ehleyr McNulty, Ohlone Coastanoan Esselen Nation Makayla Rawlins, Luiseño th 7:30 am to 10:00 am Coffee, Wilshire Grand, 5 Floor Sequoyah Pollard, Wampanoag Tribe of Gay Head 8:00 to 9:45 am Concurrent Sessions 003. Critical Alaskas: (Re)Reading and Translating Landscape, 10:00 to 11:45 am Concurrent Sessions Language, and Identity 12:00 am to 2:00 pm Lunch Break Panel 8:00 to 9:45 am – Broadway Room 615 Presidential luncheon and panel, Wilshire III, (ticketed event, Participants: limited seats) Decoloniality & Tlingit Language Revitalization Will Geiger, Abiayala Brown Bag meeting, Broadway Room 615 Alaska Pacific University The Peoples’ Home exhibit with community partner UAII at Economies of Identity: Tradition, Authenticity, and the These Days, 118 Winston st., 2cnd floor Adjudication of Nativeness Forest Haven, University of California, Irvine Urban Indigenous Place-Making through Art, Guided Tours of Decolonial Translations: Encountering Critical Theory Through 118 Winston Street Art with artist on location. Artist include River Indigenous Inspirations Sol Neely, University of Alaska, Garza (Tongva @tikwi_), Votan (Maya/Nahuatl), Cece Curly Southeast Sage (Nnee San Carlos Apache @shii.she.visions). The Harriman Alaska Expedition of 1899: Race and Land in Edward Curtis’ Landscape Photography Jen Smith, Transportation not provided. 15-20 minute walk. Tours begin on University of California, Berkeley the hour. 004. Indigenous Textualities and Contemporary Revitalization 2:00 to 3:45 pm Concurrent Sessions Panel 4:00 to 5:45 pm Concurrent Sessions 8:00 to 9:45 am – Echo Park Room 516 6:00 to 7:30 pm Opening Reception Chair: Wilshire Grand, 5th Floor Birgit Brander Rasmussen, Binghamton University Participants: 8:00pm Graduate Networking Event, Graduate Signs of Resistance, Signs of Resurgence: Literacy Student Working Group VIP Night, Club Revitalization in Indian Country Birgit Brander Rasmussen, Nokia, 800 West Olympic Blvd., Los Angeles, Binghamton University CA 90015 White Wampum in Terry Jones’ Film and Scriptwriting Penelope Kelsey, University of Colorado Boulder “From Glyphs to Bits: Indigenous Writing and CyberRevival in THURSDAY Mexico Paja Faudree, Brown University Concurrent sessions 8:00 to 9:45 am 005. Embracing Refusals 001. Women Leading Community Protection and Empowerment, Paper Session Since the 20th Century 8:00 to 9:45 am – Gem Room 612 Panel Chair: 8:00 to 9:45 am – Beverlywood Room 520 Elena Tajima Creef, Wellesley College Chair: Participants: Brooke Linsenbardt, Texas A&M University Attending The Entanglement of Blackness/Indianness or A Participants: Refusal of Simple Solidarities and Disconnections Reid Ruth Muskrat Bronson and Helen Peterson’s Definitions of Gomez, Kalamazoo College Trusteeship, Citizenship, and Guilt in the Mid-Twentieth Reading Sovereignties in the Shadow of Settler Colonialism Century Mary Klann, University of California, San Diego Ben Silverstein, University of SydneyGr “Education is a Trust Responsibility”: Indigenous Women’s Refusing Settler Desire: Lands, Bodies, and Research Relations Legislative Educational Activism in the NCAI, 1970s-1980s Jessica Bardill, Concordia University Brooke Linsenbardt, Texas A&M University Kiowa Language Persistence in the 21st Century Toni Tsatoke- Native Women Indigenizing Dallas Since the Late Twentieth Mule, Kiowa Century Farina King, Northeastern State University; 006. Thinking Through Together: Leanne Betasamosake Yolonda Blue Horse, Society of Native Nations, Texas Simpson’s As We Have Always Done Comment: Roundtable Jenny Pulsipher, Brigham Young University 8:00 to 9:45 am – Hancock Park A Room 514 West 002. Cultural Ties: Native American College Students and the Presenters: Feeling of Family Lianne Marie Leda Charlie, Yukon College 2 Leanne Betasamosake Simpson, Independent of Newfoundland Billy-Ray Belcourt, University of Alberta Nuclear Waste: Enduring Structures of Exposure Emily Astra- Madeline Whetung, University of British Columbia Jean Simmonds, York University, Department of Science and Kyle Mays, University of California, Los Angeles Technology Studies Tanya Lukin Linklater, Queens University Black and Blue Threads or The Future Métis Materiality Tasha Spillett, University of Saskatchewan Kristen Bos, University of Toronto 007. Working Against Empire: Indigenous Labor and Anti- Chemical Violence and Environmental Data Justice: Refusals, Colonial Struggles Responsibilities, and Love Michelle Murphy, University of Panel Toronto 8:00 to 9:45 am – Hancock Park B Room 514 East 011. Representations Chair: Paper Session Bernadette J Perez, Princeton University 8:00 to 9:45 am – Majestic Room 635 Participants: Chair: Sovereignty Works: Anishinaabe Labor Beyond Settler Borders Dylan AT Miner, American Indian and Indigenous Studies – Margaret Huettl, University of Nebraska-Lincoln Michigan State University Ojibwe Women and the Illegible Labor of Urban Community Participants: Organization in Minneapolis Sasha Maria Suarez, University Chief Many Treaties’ Labor Advocacy: Native Actors and the of Minnesota Twin Cities Fight for Hollywood Actors Unions in the 1940s Jacob Sexual Violence, Coerced Motherhood, and Labor Discipline in Floyd, Oklahoma State University Colorado Sugar Towns Bernadette J Perez, Princeton Writing Wounded Knee: Indigenous Journalists, Native University Newspapers, and the Dissemination of Mass(acre) Media Life on the Line: A Contemporary Ethnography of Indigenous Michael P Taylor, Brigham Young University Women Salmon Processing Workers Jeannie Morgan, Túpac Amaru II and Tupac Amaru Shakur: Indigenous Transits University of British Columbia in Occupied Yaanga Ho'esta Mo'e'hahne, Portland State Comment: University Khalil Anthony Johnson,