SOUTHWEST SEMINARS PRESENTS
NATIVE CULTURE MATTERS 2014

native_2014MONDAY NIGHTS AT 6 PM AT HOTEL SANTA FE
LECTURES: 50 MONDAYS A YEAR

A PUBLIC PROGRAM GRACIOUSLY ASSISTED BY HOTEL SANTA FE, A PICURIS PUEBLO ENTERPRISE
TO HONOR AND ACHKNOWLDE THE SMITHSONIAN MUSUEM OF THE AMERICAN INDIAN

August 4 Dr. Severin Fowles
Assistant Professor of Anthropology, Barnard College/Columbia University
Author, The Making of Made People: The Prehistoric Evolution of Hierocracy Among the Northern Tiwa of New Mexico; and An Archaeology of Doings: Secularism and the Study of Pueblo Religion.
God is Red, Still: The Archaeology of Doings

August 11 Dr. Philip Goldstone
Former Woodrow Wilson Fellow and Scientist (retired) Los Alamos National Laboratory
Historic Map Collector and Enthusiast
Maps, Mapmakers, and Troublemakers in mid-1800’s New Mexico

August 18 John Haworth (Cherokee Nation of Oklahoma)
Smithsonian National Museum of the American Indian (NMAI); Featured speaker, Native American & Indigenous Studies Association, UNESCO (Paris) and RMIT University, Melbourne, Australia;
Past Chairman, Museum Association of New York; Member, National Leadership Council of Native Arts and Cultures Foundation; Chairman, Arts and Business Council of New York and former adjunct faculty, New York University
Indigeneity: Transformation of Native Peoples Museums Over the Last Quarter Century

August 25 Dr. Suzan Shown Harjo (Hodulgee Muscogee/S. Cheyenne)
Curator, lecturer, policy advocate, columnist, writer, activist, and poet
Former Executive Director, National Congress of American Indians; Legislative Liaison; Member, Native American Policy Committee and Advisor to Presidential Transition Team, 2008-2009 President,
The Morning Star Institute, Washington, D.C.
Native Peoples and Sovereignty

September 1 Randy Brokeshoulder (Hopi/Navajo/Shawnee)
Kachina Carver Artist, Native Traditional Dancer, and Tobacco Clan member
Recipient, Institute for American Indian Education (IAIE) Higher Education Teachers Quality Scholarship, University of New Mexico
The Grass Dance

September 8 Dan Simplicio (Zuni)
Archaeologist and Laboratory Education Coordinator,
Crow Canyon Archaeological Center, Cortez, Colorado
What’s Not Growing in Zuni?

September 15 Baker Morrow
Note: At Santa Fe Community Foundation Classroom 501 Halona Street
Landscape Architect, President, and Principal, Morrow, Reardon, Wilkinson, Ltd; Professor of Practice of Landscape Architecture, University of New Mexico and Founder, MLA Program, School of Architecture and Planning; Co-Editor, Canyon Gardens: The Ancient Pueblo Landscapes of the American Southwest; Translator and Editor, A Harvest of Reluctant Souls: The Memorial of Fray Alonso Benavides,; Cabeza de Vaca: The South American Expeditions, 1540-45.
The Amazing Life of Cabeza de Vaca: First New World Secular Humanitarian

September 22 Dr. Kurt Anschutz,
Archaeologist; Co-Founder, past Program director, and Board Member,
Rio Grande Foundation for Communities and Cultural Landscapes;
Principal Investigator, cultural landscape studies, Petroglyph National Monument
Pueblo Ritual Landscapes: Archaeology of Blessing Places and Pilgrimage Pathways

September 29 Joseph ‘Woody; Aguilar (San Ildefonso)
Doctoral Candidate, University of Pennsylvania, with special interest in Tunyo (Black Mesa)
Spanish Efforts to Reconquer New Mexico: Post-Revolt Puebloan Sites in Northern New Mexico

October 6 Maybe Dr. Chris Loendorf
Archaeologist and Senior Project Manager, Gila River Indian Community,
Cultural Resource Management Program, Bapuche, Arizona
Akimel O’odham Warfare and Projectile Point Design Along the Middle Gila River, 1500-1900

$12 at the door ~ or ~ $100 for the Series of 10 Lectures

Lectures – 50 Mondays a year

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