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X-WR-CALNAME:Georgia Humanities
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X-WR-CALDESC:Events for Georgia Humanities
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DTSTART:20210101T000000
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SUMMARY:VIRTUAL EVENT—Centering the Native South: A Roundtable on Native Pasts and Futures
DESCRIPTION:Centering the Native South: A Roundtable on Native Pasts and Futures  \nIn this roundtable conversation hosted by the Society of Early Americanists\, three scholars of Indigenous histories in the Southeast will discuss their scholarship\, while reflecting on the ways that early Indigenous histories bear on the present and future. The conversation will highlight and build on their research\, which attends to Indigenous women’s lives and histories\, as reflected in both written documents and material culture\, to collective projects of education and care within Indigenous nations\, and to the connections between Indigenous pasts and presents. The distinguished panelists are Dr. Brooke Bauer (Catawba; University of South Carolina\, Lancaster)\, Dr. Malinda Maynor Lowery (Lumbee; University of North Carolina\, Chapel Hill)\, and Dr. Julie L. Reed (Cherokee; Pennsylvania State University). \nThe program is co-sponsored by the Omohundro Institute of Early American History & Culture\, an independent research organization sponsored by the College of William & Mary in Williamsburg\, Virginia. \nThis virtual panel discussion is free and open to the public to attend\, but registration is required. \nThis event is supported in part by a grant from Georgia Humanities.
URL:https://www.georgiahumanities.org/event/centering-the-native-south/
CATEGORIES:Discussion,Online
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DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20210306T100000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20210306T170000
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SUMMARY:VIRTUAL EVENT: Unknown No Longer! Giving a voice to those who have been kept silenced
DESCRIPTION:Unknown No Longer! Giving a voice to those who have been kept silenced \nJoseph McGill Jr.\, founder of the Slave Dwelling Project\, will give a lecture at the Robert Toombs Historic House Site in Washington\, Georgia\, on March 6. The presentation will include an introduction to some of the families who were enslaved at the house of slaveowner and secessionist Robert Toombs\, as well as what the enslaved people did after securing their freedom. Discussion of how the research was conducted will also be included\, followed by an audience q&a session. \nThis part of the event will also be streamed live via Facebook. \nAn exhibition of artifacts found in the one remaining slave dwelling on the property\, the “Wash House\,” will be presented\, along with an explanation of how the archaeological survey was conducted on the dwelling. \nFor more information\, contact Kimberly Clements\, Robert Toombs House Historic Site Curator. \nUnknown No Longer! is sponsored in part by a grant from Georgia Humanities. \n 
URL:https://www.georgiahumanities.org/event/unknown-no-longer/
LOCATION:Robert Toombs House Historic Site\, 216 E. Robert Toombs Ave\, Washington\, GA\, 30673\, United States
CATEGORIES:Exhibition,Lecture,Online
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