Big Read Juneau event “A Most Powerful Song: Elevating Indigenous Voices” happening Thursday, Nov. 4

“A Most Powerful Song: Elevating Indigenous Voices” is a Big Read Juneau online event taking place on Thursday, November 4, from 7 to 8:30 p.m. This NEA Big Read and UAS One Campus, One Book event continues a community celebration of Joy Harjo’s An American Sunrise and all are welcome. Please register on Zoom. Big Read Juneau is a partnership between Juneau Public Libraries, Juneau-Douglas City Museum, UAS Egan Library, Perseverance Theater, and 49 Writers with support from the National Endowment for the Arts.

During “A Most Powerful Song: Elevating Indigenous Voices,” Indigenous poets Vivian Faith PrescottMarie Tozier and X’unei Lance Twitchell will read from their work and discuss poetic lineage, the influence of U.S. Poet Laureate Joy Harjo and the importance of increasing visibility of Indigenous people and poetry. Sol Neely, Cherokee Nation Citizen and Associate Professor of English at Heritage University will provide introductory remarks and moderate the conversation with participants and attendees. The event is sponsored by the Friends of the Juneau Public Library and UAS Egan Library.

Vivian Faith Prescott lives and writes in Lingít Aaní on the land of the Shtax’heen Kwáan in Kaachxaana.áak’w, Wrangell, Alaska at her family’s fishcamp. She’s married with four grown children and two step-children. Her children are Raven of the T’akdeintaan/Snail House. She is adopted into the T’akdeintaan clan. She’s a grandmother and great-grandmother. She is of Sámi, Suomalainen, and Irish descent (among others). She is a member of the Pacific Sámi Searvi. She holds an MFA from the University of Alaska Anchorage and a MA in Cross Cultural Studies with an emphasis in Indigenous Knowledge Systems from the University of Alaska Fairbanks. She also holds an interdisciplinary PhD in Cross Cultural Studies from the University of Alaska Fairbanks. She is the author of 7 books of poetry and a collection of linked stories. Forthcoming in 2022 is her foodoir, “My Father’s Smokehouse” (West Margin Press) and a full-length poetry collection “Old Woman With Berries in Her Lap” from the University of Alaska Press’ Alaska Literary Series. Along with her daughter Vivian Mork Yéilk’, she co-hosts Planet Alaska Facebook page and is co-columnist at Planet Alaska, an award-winning column appearing in the Juneau Empire. She is a founding member of Blue Canoe Writers and a founding member of Community Roots, the first LGBTQIA group in Wrangell, Alaska. (Source: from the author)

Iñupiaq poet Marie Tozier earned an MFA from the low-residency program at the University of Alaska Anchorage. She is the author of the poetry collection Open the Dark (2020), which illuminates elements of Iñupiaq life in northwestern Alaska. Tozier has also written for the Anchorage Daily News. She teaches at the University of Alaska Fairbanks Northwest Campus. As a participant in the university’s Robert Wood Johnson Global Solutions Partnership, she traveled to Aotearoa (New Zealand) to study Maori education and culture. She has led sewing, quilting, knitting and qiviut processing, and writing classes. She lives in Nome, Alaska, with her family. (Source: Poetry Foundation)

Lance Twitchell carries the Tlingit names X̱ʼunei and Du Aaní Kawdinook, and the Haida name Ḵʼeijáakw. He lives in Juneau with his wife and bilingual children, and is from the Tlingit, Haida, and Yupʼik native nations. He speaks & studies the Tlingit language, and advocates for indigenous language revitalization. He is an Associate Professor of Alaska Native Languages at the University of Alaska Southeast, has a Ph.D. in Hawaiian and Indigenous Language Revitalization from Ka Haka ʻUla o Keʻelikōlani College of Hawaiian Language at the University of Hawaiʻi at Hilo, and is a  Northwest Coast Artist, musician, author, and filmmaker. (Source: Troubled Raven)

Cherokee Citizen and scholar Sol Neely earned his Ph.D. in Philosophy and Literature from Purdue University and completed Cornell University’s School of Criticism and Theory. He also holds degrees from the University of Alaska Anchorage in English and Philosophy. His specializations are in theory and cultural studies within literature and Native American studies.  In 2019, Neely walked the Trail of Tears with his father and daughter, which  provided an opportunity to “meditate on historical violence, transgenerational perseverance, memory, and repair.” He reflects on this experience in the essay, “The Trail Where They Cried: Displacement and Healing Across Generations”.  Dr. Neely was Associate Professor of English at UAS for X years where he coordinated the Honors Program and The Flying University, a prison-education program. He currently serves as Director of Composition and Associate Professor of English at Heritage University.

An initiative of the National Endowment for the Arts in partnership with Arts Midwest, the NEA Big Read broadens our understanding of our world, our communities, and ourselves through the joy of sharing a good book.

For more information on “A Most Powerful Song: Elevating Indigenous Voices,” go to the Facebook event, or contact Jonas Lamb at [email protected].

November 2nd, 2021|

Big Read Juneau book discussion Wed. Nov. 3 at noon

Continue to celebrate the Big Read Juneau with Juneau Public Libraries by participating in a virtual discussion of “An American Sunrise” by Joy Harjo. Pick up a free copy at the public library (while supplies last) or borrow a copy online through Alaska Digital Library. The next discussion is Wednesday, November 3 at 12 p.m. via Zoom. Register here: bit.ly/JPLbookdiscussion
Some discussion questions to think about:
  • How does the difficulty and importance of being ourselves play through the poems in the book?
  • How do the varied forms of the poems add to their impact?
  • As a reader did you find yourself surprised by what you felt and discovered in reading this book?
NEA Big Read is a program of the National Endowment for the Arts in partnership with Arts Midwest. For more information, contact Kate Enge at 907-586-0437.
November 1st, 2021|

Juneau-Douglas City Museum opens first solo artist show of the season Nov. 5

Join the City Museum for its first solo artist opening reception of the season November 5 at 4:30 p.m. to 7 p.m. Jessica Hahnlen’s exhibition – Mountains, Seas and Spirits – features silkscreen and watercolor works depicting Southeast Alaska animals, water, notable mountains, and rock faces around Juneau. Mountains, Seas and Spirits will be on display at the City Museum through December 31. Artwork will be for sale.

Due to COVID, there will be no refreshments served during the reception and masks must be worn at all times while inside the museum.

October 28th, 2021|

Juneau Public Libraries want to hear from you

Juneau Public Libraries are in the process of putting together a new strategic plan, which will inform what services they prioritize in the future. One crucial thing the library system needs to make a plan is community input. Juneau residents are invited to share their thoughts, opinions, and ideas in a brief survey. Take the survey online here, or get a paper copy at the library.

Juneau Public Libraries will be using the results as a planning tool for determining community needs and expectations. The survey is open until November 19. Take it now.

For more information, contact Library Director John Thill at 907-586-0443 or [email protected].

October 25th, 2021|

Wooshkeetaan Kootéeyaa (Totem Pole) moved to State Office Building atrium

The Juneau-Douglas City Museum (JDCM), in partnership with the Áak’w Ḵwáan Wooshkeetaan and the Alaska Department of Transportation and Public Facilities (DOT&PF), will be installing the Wooshkeetaan Kootéeyaa (Totem Pole) inside Juneau’s State Office Building atrium in November.

The Wooshkeetaan Kootéeyaa, carved by Master Carver Yéil Yádi Nathan Jackson with assistance from artists Steve Brown and Dorica Jackson, was commissioned in 1980 by the City and Borough of Juneau Centennial Art Committee as part of the Centennial celebration. Both the Wooshkeetaan Kootéeyaa honoring Tléix’ Shangukeidí (Eagle/Wolf) and the Áak’w Kootéeyaa, also carved by Jackson honoring Tléix’ Laayaneidí (Raven/Crow), are part of the permanent collection of the JDCM and were raised in front of Centennial Hall in 1983. The Áak’w Kootéeyaa was taken down and re-installed inside the Juneau-Douglas High School in 2003 and the Wooshkeetaan Kootéeyaa was taken down and placed in storage in 2016.

In preparation for the installation, the Wooshkeetaan Kootéeyaa was moved from storage to the State Office Building Atrium on Friday, October 15, where the kootéeyaa will lay flat and adjust to the new climate until it is installed. The installation is financially supported by The Rotary Club of Juneau, the Friends of the Juneau-Douglas City Museum, and a grant from Museums Alaska’s Collections Management Fund, which is supported by the Rasmuson Foundation. A rededication celebration will be held after installation.

“We are so pleased to return the Wooshkeetaan Kootéeyaa to a public space and to our community. Gunalchéesh to the Áak’w Ḵwáan Wooshkeetaan for their guidance and thank you to DOT&PF Commissioner Ryan Anderson, the Juneau Delegation, and the team at the SOB for their assistance in making this happen. I hope everyone takes the opportunity to visit the kootéeyaa and learn more about the Wooshkeetaan,” said Museum Director Beth Weigel.

Before carving began, George Jim, Sr., a Wooshkeetaan elder, was consulted and determined which figures would be included on the Wooshkeetaan Kootéeyaa and provided the following interpretation:

The Wooshkeetaan Kootéeyaa carries the figures and crests for the Eagle moiety and include from the top: Uncle Sam representing the white man and his culture presented to the Native people resulting in citizenship, the Shark Crest, the Murrelet Crest, the Thunderbird Crest, the Bear Crest, the Wolf figure as a reminder of a legend about a wolf claiming the Wooshkeetaan people as part of his family, the G̱unakadeit or Sea Bear Crest, the Good Luck Woman honoring the Raven moiety as the opposite clan they marry into, the Spirit Man representing the five powerful Spirit Men who belonged to the village at Dax̱anáak (Berner’s Bay), and the Dax̱anáak Mountain symbol representing the ancestral home of the Wooshkeetaan people.

To make a donation in support of the installation, visit the Friends of the Juneau-Douglas City Museum website. For more information, contact the City Museum at 907-586-3572 or [email protected].

(Photo by Michael Penn)

October 21st, 2021|