Native American – 91 News /news Thu, 20 Dec 2018 23:05:32 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9.4 Arts91 Roundup: 20 Years of Pacific Voices, closing weekend of Incident at Vichy, and more /news/2018/10/31/artsuw-roundup-20-years-of-pacific-voices-closing-weekend-of-incident-at-vichy-and-more/ Wed, 31 Oct 2018 21:50:20 +0000 /news/?p=59635 This week in the arts, celebrate the vibrancy, resiliency, and legacies of community members from across the Pacific, see Incident at Vichy before it closes, attend a performance by the Taiwan Philharmonic, and more!


20 Years of Pacific Voices: A Community Celebration

November 1, 4–7:30 PM | Pacific Voices Exhibit Gallery at the Burke Museum

Celebrate 20 years of community members from across the Pacific who have shared the vibrancy, resiliency, and legacies of their cultures through Pacific Voices at the Burke Museum with dance, music, food and storytelling!

Free |


FINAL WEEKEND: Incident at Vichy

October 24 to November 4 | Floyd and Delores Jones Playhouse

91 School of Drama’s season opener is a production that the New York Times considered “one of the most important plays of our time” in 1964. The questions at the heart of this story—about evil, complicity, self-preservation, and the death of human decency—are perhaps more resonant now than at any time since that first production. Guest Director Kelly Kitchens, who is well-known to local audiences for her work at Seattle Shakespeare Company and Seattle Public Theater, among others, directs an all-male cast.

$10 tickets for 91 students |


91 Symphony with Sæunn Thorsteinsdóttir, Cello | Ludovic Morlot, David Alexander Rahbee, Conductors

November 2, 7:30 PM | Katharyn Alvord Gerlich Theater

David Alexander Rahbee and Ludovic Morlot conduct the University Symphony and faculty cellist Sæunn Thorsteinsdóttir in a program of music by Brahms, Bloch, and Hindemith. Sæunn Thorsteinsdóttir is featured soloist on Bloch’s Schelomo (Hebraic Rhapsody). Ludovic Morlot conducts Hindemith’s Symphonic Metamorphosis of themes by Carl Maria von Weber, commemorating the 75th anniversary of the work’s composition.

$10 tickets for 91 students |


Taiwan Philharmonic with Stephen Hough, Piano and Shao-Chia Lü, Conductor

November 3, 7:30 PM | Katharyn Alvord Gerlich Theater

Led by Shao-Chia Lü, the Taiwan Philharmonic has increased the country’s cultural stature at home and on the international stage, and is hailed as “one of Asia’s best” byTheLos Angeles Times. For its Seattle debut, the orchestra performs Brahm’s pastoral Symphony No. 2 and “Dancing Song” by Gordon Chin, one of Taiwan’s most prolific and sought after composers. The orchestra is joined by acclaimed pianist Stephen Hough for Liszt’s Piano Concerto No. 1.

$10 tickets for 91 students when you show your Husky ID in advance at the or on the night of the show at the Box Office at Meany Hall|


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‘The Return’ illustrates Native American environmental health story /news/2013/05/24/the-return-illustrates-native-environmental-health-story/ Fri, 24 May 2013 19:09:10 +0000 /news/?p=25384 The Return Book
“The Return” is an illustrated story that portrays environmental health themes from a Native American perspective,

Through imaginative storytelling and art, “The Return” conveys environmental health from a Native American perspective. A center within the 91 School of Public Health worked with Native American tribes to create and publish the illustrated story as a 32-page comic book.

One of the goals of this Native Tradition, Environment and Community Health Project was to find out how Native American ways of understanding the world and our place in it differ from the Western concept of environmental health. Surveys, interviews, and talking circles identified three core themes of Native environmental health: community, wellness, and inter-relationship.

The Return”was created from the findings. It is a dreamlike account of a Native woman and her baby, and tells how these three concepts are passed to the next generation.

Michelle Montgomery, senior fellow in the 91 Department of Bioethics and Humanities at the 91 Center for Genomics & Healthcare Equality, and Nicholas Salazar, a student at the Institute for American Indian Arts in Santa Fe, N.M., developed the book. Montgomery is a tribal member affiliated with the Haliwa Saponi and Eastern Band Cherokee.

The 91 Center for Ecogenetics & Environmental Health and the Northwest Indian College co-managed the project. The effort began in 2008 with a collaborative grant from the National Institute for Environmental Health Sciences.

The book was distributed at the 2013 American Indian Higher Education Consortium Student Conference in Green Bay, Wisc. More dissemination opportunities are planned. The end of the book contains a discussion guide and suggestions for related art projects.

The Return”comic book is .

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