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History Revealed: Land Acknowledgments, Land Back, and the 10,000 Lakes

August 11, 2022 @ 7:00 pm - 8:30 pm CDT

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A map of the state of MN divided into sections

 

Land Acknowledgments, Land Back, and the 10,000 Lakes: Indigenous History in Minnesota
Dr. Jacob Jurss

History Revealed Series
Thursday, August 11, 2022, 7:00 pm CT

In partnership with the Ramsey County Historical Society & Roseville Library
Live presentation on Zoom
Register in advance for this meeting, register on Zoom here.After registering, you will receive a confirmation email containing information about joining the meeting.
For questions, please email [email protected]

What do land acknowledgments and debates over land back reveal about the making of Minnesota? Increasingly popular, land acknowledgments can be heard at the start of meetings to introductions of large sporting events, but what does this acknowledgment signify? Whose land is being acknowledged? How did relationships to this land transform over time? What is the connection of the land back movement? Indigenous history is Minnesota history. Today within the physical boundaries of the State of Minnesota exist seven Ojibwe band reservations, four Dakota communities, as well as thousands of Indigenous individuals living in small towns to large urban communities. Understanding how this modern-day configuration came to be is an important element of understanding the making of Minnesota.

From early interactions between Dakota and Ojibwe Native nations to recent calls for economic, social, and environmental justice for Indigenous communities, Land Acknowledgments, Land Back, and the 10,000 Lakes: Indigenous History in Minnesota will survey the early history of interactions between Indigenous nations through the treaty era with the United States through the contemporary moment seeking to better understand how our collective past continues to shape our future.

Dr. Jacob Jurss is an adjunct professor of United States and Indigenous history at the University of St. Thomas and Metropolitan State University and was a member of the St. Thomas Land Acknowledgment committee. His recently published article in The American Indian Quarterly “Relations Across the Land: Ojibwe and Dakota Interactions in the Indigenous Borderlands of the Western Great Lakes” explores the history of intertribal diplomacy and his currently book project is Bountiful Boundaries: Western Great Lakes Indigenous Borderlands and American Statecraft.

Free and open to all

Details

Date:
August 11, 2022
Time:
7:00 pm - 8:30 pm
Cost:
Free
Event Categories:
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