American Indian scholar Grounds to speak at UNC-Pembroke Nov. 15 (fwd)

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Thu Oct 25 19:01:54 UTC 2007


American Indian scholar Grounds to speak at UNC-Pembroke Nov. 15

Staff report
http://www.robesonian.com/articles/2007/10/24/news/news/story06.txt

PEMBROKE - “Native Voices: Colonial and Contemporary Issues in Native
Language Revitalization,” a presentation by Richard A. Grounds, Ph.D., will
be held Nov. 15, at 7 p.m. in the Thomas Assembly Room of the Native
American Resource Center on the campus of The University of North Carolina
at Pembroke.

The talk is free and open to the public.

Grounds is of Yuchi and Seminole heritage. He is project director for the
Euchee (Yuchi) Language Project based in Sapulpa, Okla., working with the
five remaining fluent Yuchi speakers.

After completing his doctorate at Princeton Theological Seminary in the
history of religions, he taught at St. Olaf College in Minnesota and at the
University of Tulsa. He taught courses on cultural diversity and religious
tolerance.

Grounds was also on the faculty of the Pew Foundation program in religion
and American history administered through Yale University. He is
co-chairman of Native Traditions in the Americas Group at the American
Academy of Religion.

Working for the Central Committee of the World Council of Churches, Grounds
was a director for the General Commission on Christian Unity and
Inter-religious Concerns of the United Methodist Church.

Grounds was co-convener of the hemispheric indigenous conference, “Our
Living Languages, Our Living Cultures,” held in Oklahoma City in 2002. He
serves on the statewide board of the Intertribal Wordpath Society in
Oklahoma and is currently co-chairman of the Program Council on the board
of Cultural Survival, which has launched a national campaign to protect the
most critically endangered native languages in the United States.

He presented on “Indian Stereotypes and American Identities” at the Atlanta
History Center; on museums and cultural prostitution at the American
Society for Ethnohistory Annual Meeting; and on conflicts between
anthropological research and cultural continuity for traditional
communities at the American Anthropological Association Annual Meeting.

The Native American Resource Center (NARC) is located in Old Main. Light
refreshments will be served and copies of Grounds' anthology “Native
Voices: American Indian Identity and Resistance” will be available for
purchase.

The program is sponsored by the American Indian Studies Department and NARC.
For more information about the lecture, contact Jane Haladay by calling
(919) 521-6485 or by e-mail at haladay at uncp.edu.



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