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Slideshow

Making the PBS documentary, Searching for Sequoyah, and what Sequoyah means to the world today.

SfS press release image
Joshua Nelson
English
University of Oklahoma
Zoom
Special Information:
zoom registration: https://zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_75UfWzpaQFGezSrX2sGUQw

Thursday October 14, The Homeland Returns project of Jim Wilson and Ervan Garrison will host “Making the PBS documentary, Searching for Sequoyah, and what Sequoyah means to the world today.” University of Oklahoma Professor Joshua Nelson and University of Georgia Professor LeAnne Howe present a Zoom webinar about how Sequoyah’s life of many journeys inspired their film [to be released on PBS stations in early November], as well as their ongoing research.

Following the presenters' remarks, professors Nelson and Howe will be able to respond to questions from the audience submitted via Zoom Q&A.  

Presidential Professor Joshua Nelson is Associate Professor of English and affiliated faculty with Film & Media Studies, Native American Studies, and Women's & Gender Studies at the University of Oklahoma. He is Lead Organizer of the Native Crossroads Film Festival & Symposium, and Co-Producer and Interviewer on the forthcoming PBS documentary Searching for Sequoyah, directed by James Fortier and produced by LeAnne Howe. He will direct the documentary, The Trail of the Thunderbird, about the 45h Infantry Division during World War II, and he is at work on a monograph about representations of the body in Indigenous film. The University of Oklahoma Press published his book Progressive Traditions: Identity in Cherokee Literature and Culture in 2014.  

LeAnne Howe, an enrolled member of the Choctaw Nation of Oklahoma, is a poet, novelist, playwright, filmmaker, and Professor. Professor Howe was born and raised in Oklahoma, and since 2014 has been the Eidson Distinguished Professor of American Literature in English at the University of Georgia. Her latest documentary, Searching for Sequoyah, is produced with James M. Fortier and will air in November 2021 on PBS affiliated stations across the United States. The film is the culmination of a five-year journey across the U.S. and into Mexico, following in the footsteps of Sequoyah, the inventor of the Cherokee Syllabary. Howe’s 2020 books include Famine Pots: The Choctaw Irish Gift Exchange 1847-Present, published by Michigan State University Press and co-edited with Irish scholar, Padraig Kirwan; and, When The Light of The World Was Subdued, Our Songs Came Through: A Norton Anthology of Native Nations Poetry, co-edited by U.S. Poet Laureate Joy Harjo, Howe, and Jennifer Elise Foerster. She is currently at work on 1918, a hybrid of poetry and memoir, set in Stonewall, Oklahoma, and about her grandmother’s costly survival of the flu pandemic.  

 

 

Webinar Invitation 

You are invited to a Zoom webinar. 

When: Oct 14, 2021 03:00 PM Eastern Time (US and Canada) 

Topic: Homeland Returns in the Documentary "Searching for Sequoyah," Professors Joshua Nelson of the University of Oklahoma, and LeAnne Howe of UGA



Register in advance for this webinar:

https://zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_75UfWzpaQFGezSrX2sGUQw

Personnel in this Event

Director of INAS, Eidson Distinguished Professor in American Literature
lhowe1@uga.edu

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