The recent news that Canadian writer Thomas King does not have Indigenous ancestry has prompted necessary conversations across literary communities about the need to vet accurate representations. An ...
Most Adirondack history stories focus on legendary wilderness guides or the wealthy industrialists who built Great Camps across the Park. But long before European settlement, the region was home to ...
In April 2016, LaDonna BraveBull Allard, tribal historian for the Standing Rock Sioux Tribe, founded the Sacred Stone Camp. The camp, set up along the Cannonball River in North Dakota and named for ...
Linford Fisher’s work on the project started with considering New England’s connection to the Atlantic slave trade.
Having the audacity to pursue truth is a courageous act. And, when studying historical texts or reading for leisure, it is important to examine the written word comparatively. Because the question ...
NPR's Michel Martin speaks with Julian Brave NoiseCat, an Oscar-nominated filmmaker and writer, about his new book, "We Survived the Night." In August 1959, a watchman at a Catholic-run Indian ...
For Indigenous Peoples' Day, the Up First newsletter is recognizing the work NPR's member stations do to uplift Indigenous voices. NPR network member stations are independent and locally operated.
The KUOW Book Club read "Wrecked: Unsettling Histories from the Graveyard of the Pacific" by Coll Thrush in February. Thrush joined KUOW's Katie Campbell live at Seattle Central Library Thursday to ...
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