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Description:

In recent decades, revitalization and reclamation programs for Indigenous languages have emerged at universities, both promoting the language and fostering community empowerment, particularly among youth. We will explore strategies to incorporate Indigenous cultures and languages of the Americas within the Humanities and Social Sciences as relevant and complex curricular components.

For this presentation, we will discuss opportunities for building up academic and cultural programming to challenge and expand traditional notions of Indigeneity as a “thing of the past” into relevant and pressing issues, and to reflect on how colleges and language departments can support more diverse spaces for the representation and visibility of Indigenous cultures, scholarship, and voices, in connection with curricular goals. We will specifically explore the case of Quechua-language initiatives in the global advance of the language. Quechua is the most spoken Indigenous language family of the Americas, with 8-10 million speakers in South America.

Aug
29

Language Revitalization, Cultural Reclamation, and Global Indigeneity

Américo Mendoza-Mori (Lecturer and Faculty Director for the Latinx Studies Working Group), Harvard University

webinar

Time
3:30 pm ET 4:30 pm ET
Audience
Open to all language educators
Applicable Language
All Languages
Access URL
https://cornell.zoom.us/meeting/register/tJclf-2grjwtEtchiVSzJe6mew8PPLMmcB6A
Access Instructions
Instructions
Zoom registration posted on website (https://lrc.cornell.edu/speaker-series)
Extra Materials
Sponsor
Cornell University Language Resource Center
Series
Related Topics

Published August 23, 2023 by Angelika Kraemer • Updated August 23, 2023