Myths about Native Americans abound in the American cultural imagination—including the idea that they’re “disappearing” or simply of the past. America’s Indigenous women have been perhaps even more invisible, but they are actually actively pressing for Native American survivance in the “here and now.” Dr. Garner’s talk will trace the history of settler-colonialism’s erasure of Native Americans, its continuing impact on Indigenous communities, and Native women’s powerful activism.
The Africana, Gender, and Identity Studies Department invites you to Dr. Sande Garner’s talk, Native American Women and Activism: Four Directions – Political, Environmental, Pedagogical, and Creative
Wednesday, March 23rd, 6:30, Benes Rooms
Dr. Garner is the inaugural Chief Floyd Leonard Faculty Fellow for the Myaamia Center and an Associate Professor of American Studies in the Global and Intercultural Studies Department at Miami University, Oxford, Ohio
OWU Sponsoring Organization/Office: Africana, Gender, and Identity Studies, Department
Contact: Wendi Kay at wwkay@owu.edu