Tuesday, October 3, 2023

Braiding Sweetgrass w/ Robin Kimmerer

Welcome back. Buddhist monks visited us many centuries ago. This is Fu Sang.

Gifts of the Land | A Guided Nature Tour with Robin Wall Kimmerer
(The Commons KU) Robin Wall Kimmerer takes us on a guided nature tour of Clark Reservation State Park in Jamesville, NY, as spring welcomes back migrating creatures and sends a message to wake up those who have taken a winter rest.

This video was commissioned by The Commons at the University of Kansas, in conjunction with Dr. Kimmerer's April 1, 2021, lecture (thecommons.ku.edu/kimmerer).

ABOUT: Robin Wall Kimmerer is a Native American mother, scientist, decorated professor, and enrolled member of the Citizen Potawatomi Nation. She is the author of Braiding Sweetgrass: Indigenous Wisdom, Scientific Knowledge and the Teaching of Plants and Gathering Moss: A Natural and Cultural History of Mosses.  She lives in Syracuse, New York, where she is a SUNY Distinguished Teaching Professor of Environmental Biology and the founder and director of the Center for Native Peoples and the Environment. For more info visit: robinwallkimmerer.com.

ABOUT: The Commons at the University of Kansas is a catalyst for unconventional thinking, interdisciplinary inquiry, and unexpected discoveries across the sciences, arts, and humanities. For more info visit: thecommons.ku.edu. Shot and edited by: loganrando.post.pro.

(SciFri) Science Friday conversation with Robin Wall Kimmerer

A Conversation with Robin Kimmerer Braiding Sweetgrass & Indigenuity (NACC 2021)
(Museum of Native American History) Oct. 20, 2021: This conversation between Robin Wall Kimmerer and Dan Wildcat, engaged in a conversation on "Indigenuity," how traditional knowledge meets innovation.

October 7, 2021, at 10:00 AM CST kicked off a weekend defining Indigenuity. Learn more: monah.us/past-events/2021... This event was prerecorded for the Fifth Annual Native American Cultural Celebration Oct. 7-9, 2021. Learn more about the event: monah.us/nacc-2021


ABOUT: The Museum of Native American History (MONAH) was first established in a downtown location in 2006 as the Museum of Native American Artifacts. The collection quickly outgrew the space and MONAH opened its current doors in June of 2008. Founded by David Bogle, a registered member of the Cherokee Nation, in Bentonville, Arkansas, the museum houses over 10,000 of the finest Native American artifacts. MONAH tells the 14,000-year story of Native American history through to the present with the discovery of artifacts, education, and programming.

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