
The Hōkūle’a: Indigenous Resurgence from Hawai’i to Mannahatta
- Organizer: A/P/A Institute at NYU and The New School
- Venue: Multiple
- Address:
See description for details
New York, NY 10003 United States
Copresented by the Asian/Pacific/American Institute at NYU and The New School
In the summer of 2016, the Hawaiian voyaging canoe Hōkūle‘a will be arriving to New York City—Lenape Territory—as a part of its worldwide voyage called Mālama Honua (to care for our earth). The Hōkūle‘a uses no modern navigational instruments, but instead ongoing Hawaiian creative practices that read the sun, moon, stars, clouds, winds, waves, and the patterns of a diversity of nonhuman species to find their way. The voyage is a part of a global movement for the resurgence of Indigenous knowledges, languages, and land-based practices that are ever needed in the production of alternative futures for this historical moment. This symposium is a means to think through possibilities existent when Indigenous “subjugated knowledges” chart new epistemes for the twenty-first century.
Panel 1
1-3PM at The New School (Wollman Hall, 65 W 11th St, Room 500)
Panel 2
6-8PM at New York University (20 Cooper Square, 4th floor):
Na’alehu Anthony, The Polynesia Voyaging Society
J. Kēhaulani Kauanui, Wesleyan University
Steven T. Newcomb, Indigenous Law Institute
moderated by Dean Saranillio, NYU Department of Social & Cultural Analysis
Register using the form below.
Cosponsored by the Asian/Pacific/American Studies Program in the NYU Department of Social & Cultural Analysis, NYU Native American & Indigenous Students’ Group, Hālāwai, Inc., Nā ʻŌiwi NYC, and the Global Studies, Environmental Studies, and Urban Studies programs at The New School.