Feature Story: Indigenous identity explored at conference

Indigenous theatre and performance will be the focus of a national symposium that is being held jointly by the University of Regina and First Nations University of Canada with strong support from Saskatchewan arts organizations including Common Weal Community Arts, Sâkêwêwak Artists' Collective...

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Main Author: External Relations, University of Regina
Format: Other/Unknown Material
Language:English
Published: External Relations, University of Regina 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10294/6287
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spelling ftunivregina:oai:ourspace.uregina.ca:10294/6287 2023-05-15T16:15:12+02:00 Feature Story: Indigenous identity explored at conference External Relations, University of Regina 2015-09-15 image/jpeg text/css text/html http://hdl.handle.net/10294/6287 en eng External Relations, University of Regina http://hdl.handle.net/10294/6287 Performing Turtle Island First Nations University of Canada Common Weal Community Arts Sâkêwêwak Artists' Collective Curtain Razors Sakatchewan Native Theatre Company Kathleen Irwin Faculty of Graduate Studies and Research Faculty of Fine Arts Jesse-Archibald Barber Indigenous Literature Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council SaskCulture President’s Fund Campion College Other 2015 ftunivregina 2021-05-30T17:57:02Z Indigenous theatre and performance will be the focus of a national symposium that is being held jointly by the University of Regina and First Nations University of Canada with strong support from Saskatchewan arts organizations including Common Weal Community Arts, Sâkêwêwak Artists' Collective and Curtain Razors and Sakatchewan Native Theatre Company among many others. Performing Turtle Island will bring together established and emerging scholars to examine how Indigenous theatre and performance are connected to Indigenous identity and community health. The conference is being held from Sept. 17 to 19. “Performing Turtle Island is about bridging communities, across the U of R campus, the province, Canada, and the world,” says Dr. Jesse-Archibald Barber, an assistant professor of Indigenous Literature at First Nations University and Co-Director and Curator of the event. Staff no Other/Unknown Material First Nations oURspace - The University of Regina's Institutional Repository Archibald ENVELOPE(-56.692,-56.692,-63.209,-63.209) Canada Kathleen ENVELOPE(-116.836,-116.836,55.617,55.617) Regina ENVELOPE(154.846,154.846,64.939,64.939) Turtle Island ENVELOPE(-65.845,-65.845,-66.061,-66.061)
institution Open Polar
collection oURspace - The University of Regina's Institutional Repository
op_collection_id ftunivregina
language English
topic Performing Turtle Island
First Nations University of Canada
Common Weal Community Arts
Sâkêwêwak Artists' Collective
Curtain Razors
Sakatchewan Native Theatre Company
Kathleen Irwin
Faculty of Graduate Studies and Research
Faculty of Fine Arts
Jesse-Archibald Barber
Indigenous Literature
Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council
SaskCulture
President’s Fund
Campion College
spellingShingle Performing Turtle Island
First Nations University of Canada
Common Weal Community Arts
Sâkêwêwak Artists' Collective
Curtain Razors
Sakatchewan Native Theatre Company
Kathleen Irwin
Faculty of Graduate Studies and Research
Faculty of Fine Arts
Jesse-Archibald Barber
Indigenous Literature
Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council
SaskCulture
President’s Fund
Campion College
External Relations, University of Regina
Feature Story: Indigenous identity explored at conference
topic_facet Performing Turtle Island
First Nations University of Canada
Common Weal Community Arts
Sâkêwêwak Artists' Collective
Curtain Razors
Sakatchewan Native Theatre Company
Kathleen Irwin
Faculty of Graduate Studies and Research
Faculty of Fine Arts
Jesse-Archibald Barber
Indigenous Literature
Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council
SaskCulture
President’s Fund
Campion College
description Indigenous theatre and performance will be the focus of a national symposium that is being held jointly by the University of Regina and First Nations University of Canada with strong support from Saskatchewan arts organizations including Common Weal Community Arts, Sâkêwêwak Artists' Collective and Curtain Razors and Sakatchewan Native Theatre Company among many others. Performing Turtle Island will bring together established and emerging scholars to examine how Indigenous theatre and performance are connected to Indigenous identity and community health. The conference is being held from Sept. 17 to 19. “Performing Turtle Island is about bridging communities, across the U of R campus, the province, Canada, and the world,” says Dr. Jesse-Archibald Barber, an assistant professor of Indigenous Literature at First Nations University and Co-Director and Curator of the event. Staff no
format Other/Unknown Material
author External Relations, University of Regina
author_facet External Relations, University of Regina
author_sort External Relations, University of Regina
title Feature Story: Indigenous identity explored at conference
title_short Feature Story: Indigenous identity explored at conference
title_full Feature Story: Indigenous identity explored at conference
title_fullStr Feature Story: Indigenous identity explored at conference
title_full_unstemmed Feature Story: Indigenous identity explored at conference
title_sort feature story: indigenous identity explored at conference
publisher External Relations, University of Regina
publishDate 2015
url http://hdl.handle.net/10294/6287
long_lat ENVELOPE(-56.692,-56.692,-63.209,-63.209)
ENVELOPE(-116.836,-116.836,55.617,55.617)
ENVELOPE(154.846,154.846,64.939,64.939)
ENVELOPE(-65.845,-65.845,-66.061,-66.061)
geographic Archibald
Canada
Kathleen
Regina
Turtle Island
geographic_facet Archibald
Canada
Kathleen
Regina
Turtle Island
genre First Nations
genre_facet First Nations
op_relation http://hdl.handle.net/10294/6287
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