Symposium | Tlingit Art, Spirit, and Ancestry: Healing Histories of Dispossession

Title

Symposium | Tlingit Art, Spirit, and Ancestry: Healing Histories of Dispossession

Friday, February 10, 2023 @ 1:30 pm to @ 4:30 pm

Location

Chancellor Green Rotunda

In the late nineteenth century, Presbyterian missionaries brought hundreds of Tlingit belongings from southeastern Alaska to the Princeton Theological Seminary. The belongings were later relocated to Princeton University’s collections. The movement of these Tlingit belongings between multiple institutions reflects an ongoing condition of broken knowledge.

Where does Tlingit art belong at Princeton University, and how might knowledge be restored to those from whom the items were taken? This symposium explores this question by reuniting Tlingit scholars and artists with these belongings. Our symposium will confront histories of dispossession and ask how we can restore ancestral connections. Speakers will reorient Western understandings of material objects towards Tlingit and Indigenous experiences of embodiment, spirituality, land, and kinship. Organizers envision this symposium as the beginning of an ongoing partnership between Princeton University and the University of Alaska Southeast. 

Speakers: 

  • Ernestine Saankaláxt Hayes, Kaagwaantaan Clan, Tlingit Nation, author and Emerita Professor, University of Alaska Southeast 

  • Judith Dax̱ootsú Ramos, Kwáashk’ikwáan Clan, Yaakwdáat Kwáan, Tlingit Nation, Program Coordinator, Haa Yoo X’atángi Deiyí: Our Language Pathway, University of Alaska Southeast  

  • Guná Megan Jensen, Dakhká Tlingit and Tagish Khwáan Ancestry from the Dahk’laweidi Clan, Tlingit artist  

  • Wayne Price, Tlingit master carver and Northwest Coast artist of Haines, Alaska 

  • Carin Silkaitis, Dean of School of Arts and Sciences, University of Alaska Southeast 

  • Liz Zacher, Associate Professor of Art, University of Alaska Southeast 

This symposium is cosponsored by Language, Land, and Art, a Global Initiative from the Humanities Council; the Native American and Indigenous Studies Initiative at Princeton; the Fund for Canadian Studies; the Effron Center for the Study of America; and the Princeton University Art Museum. Read more about the symposium here

Tlingit, before 1886, Laaxaayík Kwáan (Yakutat), Northwest Coast, Sheidí ch'áak' (horn eagle) 4-dram powder measure from Chief Yen-at-setl. Lent by the Department of Geosciences, Princeton University