ETHN 191: Imagining Indigenous Cedar Point: Sustainable Relations and Future, Life-Writing, and Making Public History

Cedar Point Biological Station
Cedar Point Biological Station

Students live in cabins, hike, kayak, canoe, and dine together with their professors for two weeks while learning Indigenous history, literature, and communications in beautiful western Nebraska, on the shores of Lake Ogallala. Taught by Drs Tom Gannon (ENGL & ETHN), Angel Hinzo (HIST & ETHN), and Liahnna Stanley (COMM & ETHN), the course is open to all students, and those accepted for the course will receive full scholarships covering room and board.

Students can read more about the course here: https://cedarpoint.unl.edu/imagining-indigenous-cedar-point/. Go here to sign up: https://cedarpoint.unl.edu/sign-up/. For more information about the course, please feel free to email Dr. Gannon at tgannon2@unl.edu. If students cannot afford the $100 deposit fee, they should contact Dr. Joy Castro, the director of Ethnic Studies, at jcastro2@unl.edu.

More details at: https://cedarpoint.unl.edu/imagining-indigenous-cedar-point/