Today’s episode features Emily Van Alst, Sihasapa Lakota descent, talking about indigenous and community based archaeology in Japan, Peru, Spain, and Alaska. She also talks about NAGPRA from museum, international, and indigenous perspectives. Finally we talk about how archaeology can be used to benefit indigenous communities and vice versa. Emily specifically discusses zooarchaeology and rock art as areas that are fruitful for indigenous archaeology, especially in the work she would like to pursue in the Northern Plains in her upcoming PhD program at Indiana University where she will be working with Learning NAGPRA.
SHPOs, Tribal Consultation, and Collaboration - Episode 5
Today we are speaking with Colorado Deputy State Historic Preservation Officer (SHPO) and State Archaeologist, Dr. Holly Norton. We talk through the role of the SHPO, SHPO resources, the different stakeholders in Colorado, and the collaborative museum exhibits that History Colorado has been undertaking. We also talk about Holly’s dissertation on a 1733 slave rebellion in the US Virgin Islands, Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) requests, the Colorado Commission of Indian Affairs, and the disparity in funding between SHPOs and THPOs (Tribal Historic Preservation Officers). Holly and I had way too much fun recording this episode, so even with lots of cuts it is still longer than our normal episodes. Hope you enjoy as much as we did!
Links
Contact
Protecting Marshall Island's Heritage in the Face of Climate Change - Episode 4.1
This episode is a follow up to the previous episode (episode 4) with Tina Stege about climate change in the Marshall Islands. This episode features both Tina Stege, Marshallese Anthropologist, and Jenny Newell, Collection Co-Manager at the Australian Museum, Sydney. The two talk about how museums can bring collections to life for associated communities, their collaborative ethnographic project looking at adaptions to climate change in the Marshall Islands, international repatriation vs. NAGPRA, as well as what role museums play related to climate change. We discuss questions such as “How can museums help preserve culture and help people adapt as homelands sink underwater?” and “what happens to sovereign governments as they no longer have a place to govern over”?
Links:
Curating the Future: Museums, Communities, and Climate Change
Michael Gerard, Ed. Book- What happens to sovereign nations when they have no land base anymore?
Jo-Jikum, youth climate change activist group of Kathy Jetnil Kitchner
Kathy Jetnil-Kichner poems- “Tell Them” and UN Climate Summit Poem “Dear Matafele Peinem”
Linda Tuhiwai Smith decolonizing methodology: research and Indigenous peoples
Contact:
Jessica Yaquinto
Email: jessica@livingheritageanthropology.org
Twitter (@livingheritageA)
Climate Change and the Nuclear Legacy in the Marshall Islands - Episode 4
This episode features Marshallese Anthropologist Kristina Stege talking about her community based research and advocacy related to climate change and the nuclear legacy in the Marshall Islands. She first discusses the Marshall Islands’ quest for recognition and assistance related to the U.S. testing of nuclear bombs on their islands post-WWII. Then we discuss climate change effects, advocacy, community based research, mitigation effects, and the representation of pacific islanders in larger narratives.
Make sure to check out the follow up episode focusing on the role of museums related to climate change, including how do you preserve and maintain culture when your homeland will soon be underwater and how do you make museum collections relevant for associated communities.
Links:
Video on the ethnographic project Tina discussed in the episode that she conducted with Dr. Jenny Newell in the Marshall Islands. So basically the real quick video version of this episode and the follow up: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lRKzA3QULrE&feature=share
Curating the Future: Museums, Communities, and Climate Change
Kathy Jetnil-Kichner poems- “Tell Them” and UN Climate Summit Poem “Dear Matafele Peinem”
Jo-Jikum, youth climate change activist group of Kathy Jetnil Kitchner
Contact:
Jessica Yaquinto
Email: jessica@livingheritageanthropology.org
Twitter (@livingheritageA)
Diné Public, Fire, and Indigenous Archaeology - Episode 3
In this episode, we talk to Diné (Navajo) archaeologist, Jason Nez. He talks about being Diné and an archaeologist, challenges he faces as a Native American archaeologist, and how the way archaeology is presented (aliens!) can either empower or belittle tribes. He talks about his work educating both Diné youth and the general public about archaeology and Native American perspectives and why that is important. Finally, he highlights his experiences across the country as a fire archaeologist, including what that looks like, looting concerns, and learning from other tribes about their different cultural resources.
Contact:
Jessica Yaquinto jessica@livingheritageanthropology.org; Twitter (@livingheritageA)