Beyond the Kitsch: The Pervasive Spirit of our Indigenous Creative Community with Nanibaa Beck

Tohono Chul Park 7366 N. Paseo del Norte, Tucson, AZ, United States

Throughout the Southwest, tourists and locals encounter a range of Indigenous art, from manufactured and imported cultural appropriations to fine art in galleries and museums. The state’s creative Indigenous communities are sometimes lost in what is popularly featured as Native American Art. In this presentation, Diné jeweler Nanibaa Beck will highlight contemporary Native American Art, […]

Border Geography: Key Context from the Arizona-Mexico Boundary with Scott Warren

Goodyear Civic Square - Georgia T. Lord Library Community Room 1900 Civic Square, Goodyear, AZ, United States

The boundary that separates Arizona from Mexico extends 354 miles across land and 24 miles up the Colorado River. Arizona shares this boundary with two Mexican states and two Native American Reservations. Eight ports-of-entry and six sets of border town pairs create important points of contact. Efforts to conserve land, manage urban growth, create resilient […]

Cochise, Geronimo, and the Apache Wars with Gregory McNamee

Phippen Museum 4701 N Hwy 89, Prescott, AZ, United States

Their names resound in Arizona history and pepper the of the state map, but few people know well the tangled history that surrounds the so-called “Apache Wars”, when fully half of the active U.S. Army descended on the territory to combat a relative handful of Indigenous warriors. Ironically, the Apache peoples of the Southwest had […]

Arizona Water Use from Prehistory to the Present with Jim Turner

Springville Heritage Center, Johnson-Udall Room 418 East Main Street, Springville, United States

This presentation covers humankind’s water use and food supply interactions with Arizona’s ecology from Clovis culture hunter-gatherers to prehistoric irrigation canals, contemporary Hopi and Tohono O’odham dry farming, and present-day American farmers. We will examine how overhunting and climate change affected the wooly mammoth populations and the agriculture experiments that followed. From early attempts to […]

Representation Matters – Right to Vote: The Struggle for Native American Voting Rights

Virtual AZ, United States

  Register Here! Join us for a deep dive into the history of Native American voting rights with Cora Tso, Senior Research Fellow at ASU's Kyl Center for Water Policy, and Brian Garcia, voting advocate and attorney. This event will explore the struggles, triumphs, and ongoing efforts surrounding Native American voting rights, shedding light on […]

Hiking into the Past: The Sierra Ancha Cliff Dwellings with John Mack

Sedona Public Library in the Village 25 W. Saddlehorn Road, Sedona, AZ, United States

This presentation examines the remarkable living structures built by the people who first lived in the canyons of the Sierra Ancha wilderness during the early Middle Ages. The architectural dwellings reflect the culture and history of these people and help us understand their contributions to life in the Arizona desert. The presentation includes numerous photos […]

Dia de los Muertos Storytelling with Zarco Guerrero

Sam Garcia Library 495 E. Western Ave, Avondale, United States

Dia de Los Muertos is a highly celebrated and significant holiday held throughout Mexico, Latin America, and the Southwest. It is a day when homage is paid with prayers, offerings of food and the building of altars to those who have gone before us. Join Guerrero and his unique masked characters as they celebrate Día […]

The Rise of Antisemitism and Nazi Propaganda with Bjorn Krondorfer

Flagstaff City - Coconino County Public Library - East Flagstaff Community Library 3000 North Fourth Street Suite 5, Flagstaff, United States

In June of 2021, Holocaust education became a required subject in Arizona public middle and high schools, making space for a discussion on the rise of antisemitic propaganda in 20th century Germany. This presentation will begin with a brief look at the early stages of antisemitic messaging in the 1890s, 09’s and WWI into the […]

Indigenous Signs and Symbols: Pee-Posh/Kwatsan with Yolanda Hart Stevens

Maricopa County Library District - White Tank Library 20304 West White Tank Mountain Road, Waddell, United States

Native Americans in the U.S. are diverse, and their contributions have enriched our lives in countless ways. People do not always realize the origins of Native contributions to the language, culture, and traditions of the U.S. What are Native signs and symbols? What do they mean? Where do they appear? They can represent animals and […]

Talking Code with a Secret Weapon: Navajo Code Talkers Speak with Laura Tohe

Coolidge Public Library 160 W. Central Avenue, Coolidge, AZ, United States

During WWII a group of young Navajo men enlisted in the Marines unaware that they would develop a secret code against the Japanese military. This select group of Code Talkers devised a Navajo language code that was accurate, quick, never broken, and saved many American lives. Excerpts from live interviews with the Code Talkers tell […]

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