All are invited to participate in a discussion of racial justice in honor of US Native American Heritage Month:
Nov 18th, 12-1:00pm ET
Prof Dawn Marsh will join to discuss an example of an Indiana town and indigenous peoples striving to tell true US history.
Please read this Politico article prior to the discussion for full background and a fruitful discussion: https://www.politico.com/news/magazine/2020/07/31/culture-wars-fort-wayne-373011.
Professor Marsh served as one of the experts interviewed in this article.
Follow the Zoom information below to join:
Join Zoom Meeting
https://purdue-edu.zoom.us/j/99887699809?pwd=YmVyS09GcUd1dEZxTEN5dlNRNFJFUT09
Meeting ID: 998 8769 9809
Passcode: 235807
Speaker's Bio:
Dawn G. Marsh accepted an appointment in the History Department in 2007 with specialization in Native American and Indigenous History. Prof. Marsh’s book, A Lenape among the Quakers: The Life of Hannah Freeman, reconstructs the life of a Lenape woman in the eighteenth century—from the days of her grandmothers before European settlement to the beginning of the nineteenth century. Prof. Marsh works closely with the Native American Educational and Cultural Center (NAECC) acting as Faculty Advisor to the Native American Student Association (NASA) and as a collaborator in the center’s programs. Most recently she developed a minor in Native American and Indigenous Studies in the School of Interdisciplinary Studies and will act as Director of Native American and Indigenous Studies beginning in Fall 2014.
Lori Hoagland
Profesor, Purdue University
Horticultura y arquitectura del paisaje
Codirectora del Instituto Nexus
Correo electrónico: c4e-nexus@purdue.edu
Walter Daniel Leon-Salas
Profesor Asociado, Purdue University
Tecnología de ingeniería eléctrica
Codirector del Instituto Nexus
Correo electrónico: c4e-nexus@purdue.edu
Dennis Macedo
Profesor Asociado, UNSA
Agronomía
Codirector del Instituto Nexus
Correo electrónico: dmacedova@unsa.edu.pe