Episode 7: Sharing Personal Narratives, Re-Shaping Societal Narratives
Angie Carter is a writer, organizer, and sociologist whose work focuses on rural communities, agriculture, and movements for ecological and food justice. Originally from the land between two rivers, or what is now known as Iowa, she continues to remain engaged in the movements for ecological justice...
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ftmichigantuniv:oai:digitalcommons.mtu.edu:michigantech-p-36623 2023-08-27T04:04:03+02:00 Episode 7: Sharing Personal Narratives, Re-Shaping Societal Narratives Carter, Angela 2023-05-31T07:00:00Z https://digitalcommons.mtu.edu/michigantech-p/17346 https://www.ecotheatrelab.com/angie-carter unknown Digital Commons @ Michigan Tech https://digitalcommons.mtu.edu/michigantech-p/17346 https://www.ecotheatrelab.com/angie-carter Michigan Tech Publications Department of Social Sciences text 2023 ftmichigantuniv 2023-08-03T18:03:48Z Angie Carter is a writer, organizer, and sociologist whose work focuses on rural communities, agriculture, and movements for ecological and food justice. Originally from the land between two rivers, or what is now known as Iowa, she continues to remain engaged in the movements for ecological justice in the heart of what is now the commodified agricultural system. She currently lives in a very different watershed today – Lake Superior – where she works at Michigan Technological University as an associate professor in the Department of Social Sciences on Michigan’s Keweenaw Peninsula. She also serves as co-president of the Women, Food and Agriculture board and on the Western Upper Peninsula’s Food Systems Collaborative’s planning team. Angie Carter has lived the majority of her life and continues to find much inspiration for her scholarly and creative work from the lands and waters known today as Iowa, taken through theft and false treaties by the US federal government from the Ioway, Meskwaki, and Sauk nations in 1838 and 1842. These lands and waters provided historic and seasonal homelands and hunting grounds for the Oceti Sakowin, Winnebago, Potawatomi, Ponca, Ottawa peoples, among others. Today, the Sac and Fox Tribe of the Mississippi in Iowa, or the Meskwaki Nation, own a settlement in central Iowa, the Omaha and Winnebago nations own lands in western Iowa and, in 2022, 7 acres in Johnson County, IA became the first lands formerly returned to the Iowa Tribe of Kansas and Nebraska. Today, Angie lives along Lake Superior, on the ancestral and contemporary homelands of the Anishinaabe, ceded to the US through the Treaty of La Pointe in 1842 and now known as the western part of Michigan’s Upper Peninsula and northern Wisconsin. She is indebted to those who have cared for, since time immemorial, the lands and waters she knows as her childhood and adulthood homes. She works to unlearn colonial relations within human and more-than-human communities through her professional and personal lives. Visit The EcoTheatre ... Text anishina* Michigan Technological University: Digital Commons @ Michigan Tech |
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Angie Carter is a writer, organizer, and sociologist whose work focuses on rural communities, agriculture, and movements for ecological and food justice. Originally from the land between two rivers, or what is now known as Iowa, she continues to remain engaged in the movements for ecological justice in the heart of what is now the commodified agricultural system. She currently lives in a very different watershed today – Lake Superior – where she works at Michigan Technological University as an associate professor in the Department of Social Sciences on Michigan’s Keweenaw Peninsula. She also serves as co-president of the Women, Food and Agriculture board and on the Western Upper Peninsula’s Food Systems Collaborative’s planning team. Angie Carter has lived the majority of her life and continues to find much inspiration for her scholarly and creative work from the lands and waters known today as Iowa, taken through theft and false treaties by the US federal government from the Ioway, Meskwaki, and Sauk nations in 1838 and 1842. These lands and waters provided historic and seasonal homelands and hunting grounds for the Oceti Sakowin, Winnebago, Potawatomi, Ponca, Ottawa peoples, among others. Today, the Sac and Fox Tribe of the Mississippi in Iowa, or the Meskwaki Nation, own a settlement in central Iowa, the Omaha and Winnebago nations own lands in western Iowa and, in 2022, 7 acres in Johnson County, IA became the first lands formerly returned to the Iowa Tribe of Kansas and Nebraska. Today, Angie lives along Lake Superior, on the ancestral and contemporary homelands of the Anishinaabe, ceded to the US through the Treaty of La Pointe in 1842 and now known as the western part of Michigan’s Upper Peninsula and northern Wisconsin. She is indebted to those who have cared for, since time immemorial, the lands and waters she knows as her childhood and adulthood homes. She works to unlearn colonial relations within human and more-than-human communities through her professional and personal lives. Visit The EcoTheatre ... |
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author |
Carter, Angela |
author_facet |
Carter, Angela |
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Carter, Angela |
title |
Episode 7: Sharing Personal Narratives, Re-Shaping Societal Narratives |
title_short |
Episode 7: Sharing Personal Narratives, Re-Shaping Societal Narratives |
title_full |
Episode 7: Sharing Personal Narratives, Re-Shaping Societal Narratives |
title_fullStr |
Episode 7: Sharing Personal Narratives, Re-Shaping Societal Narratives |
title_full_unstemmed |
Episode 7: Sharing Personal Narratives, Re-Shaping Societal Narratives |
title_sort |
episode 7: sharing personal narratives, re-shaping societal narratives |
publisher |
Digital Commons @ Michigan Tech |
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2023 |
url |
https://digitalcommons.mtu.edu/michigantech-p/17346 https://www.ecotheatrelab.com/angie-carter |
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anishina* |
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anishina* |
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Michigan Tech Publications |
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https://digitalcommons.mtu.edu/michigantech-p/17346 https://www.ecotheatrelab.com/angie-carter |
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