Ellen
Cushman, a noted scholar of Cherokee language and literacy will speak on
“Cherokee Writing: Mediating Traditions,
Codifying Nation” on Thursday, February 14, at 4 p.m. in Room 411 of Kimpel
Hall on the University of Arkansas-Fayetteville campus.
“Cherokees
have a long history of conceptualizing the use of media quite differently from
the alphabetic norm in order to accommodate the Cherokee language and develop
the nation as a sovereign entity,” Cushman said, previewing her talk. “Cherokees use a unique, indigenous writing
system to mediate our traditions, to pursue our cultural perseverance, and to
maintain our linguistic heritage.”
Cushman
will offer a brief overview of the history of this mediation, revealing how one
tribe continues to mediate its tradition through writing and digital videos,
games, and online language classes. Drawing
on five years of ethnohistorical research, the talk will describe the evolution
of the Cherokee writing system from script, to print, to digital forms and show
how it continues to serve important linguistic, cultural, and historical
functions for the modern Cherokee Nation, marking the nation’s civility and
sovereignty at once.
Cushman
is Professor of Writing, Rhetoric, and American Cultures at Michigan State
University. A Cherokee Nation citizen
and a former Cherokee Nation Sequoyah Commissioner, she is the author of The Struggle and the Tools: Oral and Literate Strategies in an Inner
City Community and The Cherokee Syllabary: Writing the People’s
Perseverance .