Join our panelists for a discussion of the history, roles, and uses of food in maintaining indigenous cultures. This panel considers the Native food sovereignty movement and the creative ways that some museums have connected with Native food production; cooking traditions and the perpetuation of culture; and the continuities from past into present in approaches to Native American cuisine. Moderator: Kathleen Barker, Assistant Director of Education & Public Programs, Massachusetts Historical Society Presenters: Elizabeth Hoover, Assistant Professor of American Studies and Ethnic Studies, Brown University Rachel Sayet, Mashpee Archives Loren Spears, Executive Director, Tomaquag Museu
This paper examines hybridity in the diet of colonial United States, and investigates how both Indig...
Commissioned by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention\ue2\u20ac\u2122s (CDC) Native Diabete...
Prof. Karen Kramer Russell, Associate Curator of Native American Art and Cultures, discusses the Pea...
Effectively engaging in food work with and among Native American people toward food sovereignty requ...
Roots, berries, elk and salmon were at the center of traditional food culture for the Coast Salish p...
This handout informs the audience about a variety of traditional eating patterns of Native Americans...
Food for Thought is a documentary I produced about food. My goal is to highlight how American Indian...
This dissertation demonstrates how Indigenous cuisines hold significant potential for Biocultural Di...
Food sovereignty is defined as a universal right to have control over the source and content of one’...
Funded by Nellis Air Force Base (NAFB), my thesis research and analysis examined Native American kno...
An understanding of traditional Native American food patterns is needed to develop efforts for decre...
Indigenous food systems are an essential asset of tribal sovereignty; however, these systems have be...
Today Native Americans have higher rates of diet-related illness and mortalities than any other raci...
This thesis is concerned with the significant cultural, physical, and emotional losses of the Ojibwe...
Effective foodways transmission is critical to maintain the food sovereignty of indigenous peoples. ...
This paper examines hybridity in the diet of colonial United States, and investigates how both Indig...
Commissioned by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention\ue2\u20ac\u2122s (CDC) Native Diabete...
Prof. Karen Kramer Russell, Associate Curator of Native American Art and Cultures, discusses the Pea...
Effectively engaging in food work with and among Native American people toward food sovereignty requ...
Roots, berries, elk and salmon were at the center of traditional food culture for the Coast Salish p...
This handout informs the audience about a variety of traditional eating patterns of Native Americans...
Food for Thought is a documentary I produced about food. My goal is to highlight how American Indian...
This dissertation demonstrates how Indigenous cuisines hold significant potential for Biocultural Di...
Food sovereignty is defined as a universal right to have control over the source and content of one’...
Funded by Nellis Air Force Base (NAFB), my thesis research and analysis examined Native American kno...
An understanding of traditional Native American food patterns is needed to develop efforts for decre...
Indigenous food systems are an essential asset of tribal sovereignty; however, these systems have be...
Today Native Americans have higher rates of diet-related illness and mortalities than any other raci...
This thesis is concerned with the significant cultural, physical, and emotional losses of the Ojibwe...
Effective foodways transmission is critical to maintain the food sovereignty of indigenous peoples. ...
This paper examines hybridity in the diet of colonial United States, and investigates how both Indig...
Commissioned by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention\ue2\u20ac\u2122s (CDC) Native Diabete...
Prof. Karen Kramer Russell, Associate Curator of Native American Art and Cultures, discusses the Pea...