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    Who Was Miguel Trujillo? In the Words of His Granddaughter

    enJune 21, 2023
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    About this Episode

    How do you take the measure of a man, especially one as reticent about his history-making accomplishment as Miguel Trujillo? If you’ve never heard of Miguel or Trujillo v. Garley, the landmark 1948 case that provided Native Americans residing on tribal lands in New Mexico the right to vote, settle in for this intimate portrait of a true American hero.

    This is the second episode in Encounter Culture’s collaboration with the New Mexico History Museum, exploring the fascinating story of Native American suffrage before and after Trujillo v. Garley.

    If you haven’t already, we recommend you check out episode one, as it forms the foundation of the entire season. Then join host Charlotte Jusinski and series co-host Stephanie Padilla (Isleta, Laguna, Cochiti) here as they piece together the extraordinary life of Miguel Trujillo, an unsung champion of the voting rights movement who’s perhaps better known as a beloved husband, father, and grandfather––with Karen Waconda, Native healer, community health educator, and granddaughter of Miguel Trujillo.

    Cover Photo: Miguel and Ruchanda Trujillo, ca. 1980. Photograph courtesy Dr. Michael Trujillo.

    ***

    Visit http://newmexicoculture.org for info about our museums, historic sites, virtual tours, and more. 

    To celebrate this season’s collaboration with the New Mexico History Museum, we’d like to thank you for being a part of our listening community at Encounter Culture. 

    Enter to win a package of four CulturePasses and a one-year subscription to El Palacio magazine all valued at $145 by visiting https://podcast.nmculture.org/giveaway

    Whether you’re a local resident, or you’re visiting us on your travels, CulturePass is your ticket to each of our 15 museums and historic sites.

    Enter by August 31, 2023. You must be 18 years or older to apply, and there is no purchase necessary. This opportunity is made possible by the New Mexico Department of Cultural Affairs and the Museum of New Mexico Foundation.

    ***

    Encounter Culture, a production of the New Mexico Department of Cultural Affairs, is produced and edited by Andrea Klunder at The Creative Impostor Studios.

    Hosted by Stephanie Padilla (Isleta, Laguna, Cochiti) & Charlotte Jusinski, Editor at El Palacio Magazine

    Technical Director & Production Audio: Edwin R. Ruiz

    Recording Engineer: Kabby at Kabby Sound Studios in Santa Fe

    Executive Producer: Daniel Zillmann

    Consulting Producer & Editor: Monica Braine (Assiniboine/Lakota) 

    Associate Producer & Editor: Alex Riegler

    Show Notes: Lisa Widder

    Social Media Design: Caitlin Sunderland

    Theme Music: D’Santi Nava

    Instagram: @newmexicanculture

    For more, visit podcast.nmculture.org.

    Special thank you to Clark Tenakhongva, along with Gary Stroutsos and Matthew Nelson, for the incredible Hopi music featured throughout all 6 episodes of this season. Their new album Hon Muru is set to release in August 2023 and will be available for purchase along with their other recordings on Bandcamp and at ongtupqa.com.

    This season was made possible due to the generosity of the National Endowment for the Humanities and the family of Miguel and Ruchanda Trujillo.

    Recent Episodes from Encounter Culture

    Protective Threads: Exploring Indigenous Fashion and Advocacy with Bobby Brower and Tara Trudell

    Protective Threads: Exploring Indigenous Fashion and Advocacy with Bobby Brower and Tara Trudell

    Creating art in the face of grief can be complicated and hard to navigate, especially when the grief feels both private and personal—and a part of a much larger epidemic, like the Missing and Murdered Indigenous People (MMIP) crisis. 

    Both Bobby Brower (Iñupiaq) and Tara Trudell (Santee Sioux/Rarámuri/Mexican/Spanish) found their way into speaking about the MMIP crisis through clothing and adornment that are linked to a long history of protection, prayer, and collaboration. 

    On this episode of Encounter Culture, Brower and Trudell talk with host Emily Withnall about creating Native Alaskan atikluks and creating beads out of paper, respectively, and the reason it is so important to do this work in community. 

    Brower is a fashion designer whose work has been featured on the TV series Alaska Daily and in New York Fashion Week, among others. Trudell is a multi-media artist working in fabric, paper, photography, and film, among other mediums. 

    For both women, the art cannot exist without community, and it is in community that important stories and information can be shared and held. 

    MENTIONED IN THIS EPISODE

    Museum of International Folk Art

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    We’d love to hear from you! Send feedback to elpalacio@dca.nm.gov. You can write a regular email or record a short voice memo and attach it for us to listen to.

    Visit https://newmexicoculture.org for info about our museums, historic sites, virtual tours, and more.

    Our favorite way to fully experience everything they have to offer is with the New Mexico Culture Pass. Find out how to get yours here.

    Subscribe to El Palacio Magazine

    ***

    Encounter Culture, a production of the New Mexico Department of Cultural Affairs, is produced and edited by Andrea Klunder at The Creative Impostor Studios.

    Hosted by Emily Withnall, editor at El Palacio Magazine

    Executive Producer: Daniel Zillmann

    Technical Director & Post-Production Audio: Edwin R. Ruiz

    Recording Engineer: Kabby at Kabby Sound Studios in Santa Fe

    Editor & Production Manager: Alex Riegler

    Theme Music: D’Santi Nava

    Special music in this episode: “Kinship Honor – K’é Biyiin,” written by Herman Cody & Radmilla Cody, performed by Radmilla Cody. Courtesy Canyon Records. Also, “Mother’s Words – Amá Bizaad,” written by Herman Cody & Radmilla Cody, performed by Radmilla Cody, courtesy Canyon Records. 

    Instagram: @newmexicanculture and @elpalaciomagazine

     

    Encounter Culture
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    Star Parties, Rim-Blown Flutes, and Pueblo History at Jemez Historic Site with Marlon Magdalena

    Jemez Historic Site, like all of New Mexico’s Historic Sites and museums, offers unique historical and cultural perspectives on the deep and wide-ranging communities, languages, and traditions across the state. And while New Mexico contains a complicated and layered history, these Sites not only honor history but vibrant and ongoing cultures that continue to this day. 

    Marlon Magdalena, the Instructional Coordinator Supervisor at Jemez Historic Site and member of the Jemez Pueblo, says that all aspects of his community, currently and in the past, are important.

    “My primary goal is just to tell people who the Jemez people are--that we're people that are still around. We're Indigenous people, Native American people, that we still exist. We’re still here. And we still have our languages, we still have our language, we have our culture traditions.” 

    In this episode of Encounter Culture, Marlon Magdalena shares his knowledge of the night skies, his perspective on the Pueblo Revolt, and his flute making and flute playing. Notably, Marlon played with Clark Tenakhongva and Matthew Nelson of Öngtupqa in the United Arab Emirates. Clark and Matthew's music (featuring Gary Stroutsos on flute) is featured throughout season 4 of Encounter Culture, which tells the story of Miguel Trujillo. 

    MENTIONED IN THIS EPISODE

    Visit https://newmexicoculture.org for info about our museums, historic sites, virtual tours, and more.

    Our favorite way to fully experience everything they have to offer is with the New Mexico Culture Pass. Find out how to get yours here.

    Subscribe to El Palacio Magazine

    ***

    Encounter Culture, a production of the New Mexico Department of Cultural Affairs, is produced and edited by Andrea Klunder at The Creative Impostor Studios.

    Hosted by Emily Withnall, editor at El Palacio Magazine

    Executive Producer: Daniel Zillmann

    Technical Director & Post-Production Audio: Edwin R. Ruiz

    Recording Engineer: Kabby at Kabby Sound Studios in Santa Fe

    Editor & Production Manager: Alex Riegler

    Theme Music: D’Santi Nava

    Instagram: @newmexicanculture

    Encounter Culture
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    Keeping New Mexico's Spanish Alive: The National Hispanic Cultural Center's Legacy Project

    Keeping New Mexico's Spanish Alive: The National Hispanic Cultural Center's Legacy Project

    Traveling to some remote parts of Northern New Mexico can feel a little like traveling back in time. There’s the slower, rural lifestyle and lack of cell reception, for starters, but in some small pockets of rural communities, people still speak a 17th-century dialect of Spanish. 

    Encounter Culture host Emily Withnall speaks with National Hispanic Cultural Center’s executive director, Zack Quintero, archivist Robin Moses, and Librarian Amy Padilla about their work to collect and preserve this ancient Spanish dialect before it disappears—which they say could happen in just fifteen years. Though the mountainous region of Northern New Mexico once helped to preserve this unique dialect, greater connectivity and the forces of assimilation have resulted in fewer native speakers. 

    As Zack, Robin, and Amy reveal, they hope to preserve New Mexican Spanish as a part of their work with NHCC, but their investment in the project is personal, too.

    To learn more about the Legacy Project, go to www.nhccnm.org. New information will be added to the website as the project progresses. Or visit the National Hispanic Cultural Center in person. The museum is open every day of the week, except Mondays. And if you’re interested in contributing to the project, please contact Zack Quintero at Zack.quintero@dca.nm.gov or Robin Moses at robin.moses@dca.nm.gov.

    MENTIONED IN THIS EPISODE

    New York Times article by Simon Romero

    Esther Cordova May

    Instituto Cervantes Albuquerque

    New Mexico Highlands University

    Northern New Mexico College

    We’d love to hear from you! Send feedback to elpalacio@dca.nm.gov. You can write a regular email or record a short voice memo and attach it for us to listen to.

    Visit https://newmexicoculture.org for info about our museums, historic sites, virtual tours, and more.

    Our favorite way to fully experience everything they have to offer is with the New Mexico Culture Pass. Find out how to get yours here.

    Subscribe to El Palacio Magazine

    Encounter Culture, a production of the New Mexico Department of Cultural Affairs, is produced and edited by Andrea Klunder at The Creative Impostor Studios.

    Hosted by Emily Withnall, editor at El Palacio Magazine

    Executive Producer: Daniel Zillmann

    Technical Director & Post-Production Audio: Edwin R. Ruiz

    Recording Engineer: Kabby at Kabby Sound Studios in Santa Fe

    Editor & Production Manager: Alex Riegler

    Theme Music: D’Santi Nava

    Instagram: @newmexicanculture

    Encounter Culture
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    In addition to his work as a researcher and paleontologist, Dr. Tony Fiorillo is the executive director of the New Mexico Museum of Natural History & Science. His career has covered several continents largely to study dinosaurs and the environments in which they lived. For more than two decades, Fiorillo focused on the Cretaceous of Alaska. There, his teams made significant advances in the understanding of ancient Arctic biodiversity and paleoecosystems as a way of understanding future climates.

    In this episode, Fiorillo joins Encounter Culture host Emily Withnall in a conversation about arctic dinosaurs, what 19th-century scientists understood about the first dinosaurs they found, and how dinosaurs can provide insight for what’s in store for humans. 

    MENTIONED IN THIS EPISODE

    New Mexico Museum of Natural History & Science

    https://www.nmnaturalhistory.org/ 

    Benjamin Waterhouse Hawkins dinosaur sculptures at Crystal Palace

    https://www.nhm.ac.uk/discover/crystal-palace-dinosaurs.html 

    Dinosaurs at Denali National Park

    https://www.nps.gov/dena/learn/nature/fossils.htm

     

    We’d love to hear from you! Send feedback to elpalacio@dca.nm.gov. You can write a regular email or record a short voice memo and attach it for us to listen to.

    Visit https://newmexicoculture.org for info about our museums, historic sites, virtual tours, and more.

    Our favorite way to fully experience everything they have to offer is with the New Mexico Culture Pass. Find out how to get yours here.

    Subscribe to El Palacio Magazine

    ***

    Encounter Culture, a production of the New Mexico Department of Cultural Affairs, is produced and edited by Andrea Klunder at The Creative Impostor Studios.

    Hosted by Emily Withnall, editor at El Palacio Magazine

    Executive Producer: Daniel Zillmann

    Technical Director & Post-Production Audio: Edwin R. Ruiz

    Recording Engineer: Kabby at Kabby Sound Studios in Santa Fe

    Editor & Production Manager: Alex Riegler

    Theme Music: D’Santi Nava

    Instagram: @newmexicanculture

    Encounter Culture
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    What would it be like to see a symphony? How can you capture the rhythm of waves or a murmuration in constellations of light? If anyone can offer a visual representation of multi-sensory experiences, multimedia artist Leo Villareal can. As Villareal shares in his conversation with Encounter Culture host, Emily Withnall, “I think of my tools more like instruments in a way. And I'm making kind of visual music.”

    Leo Villareal is a world-renowned artist with roots in Albuquerque, New Mexico, and in El Paso and Marfa, Texas. He currently lives in Brooklyn where he owns a gallery and oversees a team of artists, engineers, and programmers. His light sculptures can be seen in galleries in Geneva, London, Hong Kong, San Francisco, Madrid, Washington, D.C., Beijing, Amsterdam, New York, and San Antonio—to name a few.

    Among Villareal’s newest light sculptures is Astral Array, an installation on view permanently in the outdoor breezeway to New Mexico Museum of Art’s new Vladem Contemporary location in the Santa Fe Railyard.

    Villareal draws inspiration from the natural world, from Indigenous weaving, and from computer coding and programming. Despite the sometimes-impermanent nature of his installations, many of which are site- and time-specific, he appreciates the cycle of creation and dismantling inherent to his work and to the ways in which his continued experiments with light are visible to all. 

    MENTIONED IN THIS EPISODE

    New Mexico Museum of Art Vladem Contemporary

    Illuminated River: A Public Art Commission

    Visit https://newmexicoculture.org for info about our museums, historic sites, virtual tours, and more.

    Our favorite way to fully experience everything they have to offer is with the New Mexico Culture Pass. Find out how to get yours here.

    Subscribe to El Palacio Magazine

    ***

    Encounter Culture, a production of the New Mexico Department of Cultural Affairs, is produced and edited by Andrea Klunder at The Creative Impostor Studios.

    Hosted by Emily Withnall, editor at El Palacio Magazine

    Executive Producer: Daniel Zillmann

    Technical Director & Post-Production Audio: Edwin R. Ruiz

    Recording Engineer: Kabby at Kabby Sound Studios in Santa Fe

    Editor & Production Manager: Alex Riegler

    Theme Music: D’Santi Nava

    Instagram: @newmexicanculture

    Encounter Culture
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    Listen to the Land: Art at Bosque Redondo with Dakota Mace, Daisy Trudell-Mills, and Kéyah Keenan Henry

    Listen to the Land: Art at Bosque Redondo with Dakota Mace, Daisy Trudell-Mills, and Kéyah Keenan Henry

    Indigo, cochineal, red earth, and corn pollen: these are among some of the traditional materials used in the art of Dakota Mace (Diné), Kéyah Keenan Henry (Diné), and Daisy Trudell-Mills (Santee Dakota, Mexican, and Jewish) in the Naaldeeh exhibition at the Bosque Redondo Memorial. 

    Dakota Mace is a nationally renowned artist and instructor at the Institute for American Indian Arts in Santa Fe. In creating work for the Bosque Redondo Memorial, Dakota invited her students, Kéyah and Daisy, to create works alongside her that would speak history of the place and the suffering endured by the Diné people during the Long Walk and their four-year internment at Fort Sumner. 

    Encounter Culture host Emily Withnall invited the three artists to speak about their art, the history of Bosque Redondo, and the ways art can provide healing for the Diné and Ndé whose histories are tied to the land. 

    Many Diné people grew up with warnings from elders to never travel to Bosque Redondo Memorial. Some continue to hold this warning to heart, and some, like Dakota and Kéyah, offer their art in prayer. For Daisy, the stories of the homesickness that the Diné and Ndé experienced at Bosque Redondo resonated deeply. 

    MENTIONED IN THIS EPISODE

    EC0202: Listen, and Speak the Truth: Collaborating Through Conversation on the Bosque Redondo Memorial with Manuelito Wheeler and Aaron Roth

    El Palacio: Challenging History: The Conception and Crafting of A World-Class Exhibition That Honors One of New Mexico's Darkest Chapters

    Dakota Mace

    Daisy Trudell-Mills

    ***

    Visit https://newmexicoculture.org for info about our museums, historic sites, virtual tours, and more.

    Our favorite way to fully experience everything they have to offer is with the New Mexico Culture Pass. Find out how to get yours here.

    Subscribe to El Palacio Magazine

    Encounter Culture, a production of the New Mexico Department of Cultural Affairs, is produced and edited by Andrea Klunder at The Creative Impostor Studios.

    Hosted by Emily Withnall, editor at El Palacio Magazine

    Executive Producer: Daniel Zillmann

    Technical Director & Post-Production Audio: Edwin R. Ruiz

    Recording Engineer: Kabby at Kabby Sound Studios in Santa Fe

    Editor & Production Manager: Alex Riegler

    Theme Music: D’Santi Nava

    Instagram: @newmexicanculture

    For more, visit podcast.nmculture.org.

    Encounter Culture
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    Dusty Mesas & Accessible Art: Introducing Our New Host, Emily Withnall

    Meet Emily Withnall, the new editor of El Palacio Magazine and your new podcast host of Encounter Culture

    As a journalist and writer—and New Mexican, first of all—Emily is acquainted with all facets of the magazine publishing process. In conversation with Andrea Klunder, producer and story editor for Encounter Culture, Emily talks about her love of audio storytelling that goes all the way back to growing up on radio. With Encounter Culture, she strives for captivating storytelling with just the right amount of wandering. 

    Emily is passionate about artists experimenting with public spaces, making art more accessible and less intimidating. Wearing the hats of El Palacio editor and Encounter Culture host, she wants to expand the magazine’s conversations into the podcast and also invite more Indigenous writers and artists to join in. 

    MENTIONED IN THIS EPISODE

    EC0308: How to Write About Art and Environment with Emily Withnall, El Palacio

    EC0307: Geology in New Mexico with a Side Gig in Space with Jayne Aubele and Dr. Larry Crumpler

    EC0305: Art That Is For Everyone: Cristina González and Katie Doyle, Vladem Contemporary

    EC0302: What Have the Trees Seen? New Mexico Folklore at Los Luceros Historic Site with Carly Stewart and Rebecca Ward

    “The Feather Thief” on This American Life

    Will Schwarz's Sunday Puzzle

    Latino USA with Maria Hinojosa

    Democracy Now! with Amy Goodman

    KUNM

    Cristina González at Vladem Contemporary

    Visit https://newmexicoculture.org for info about our museums, historic sites, virtual tours, and more.

    Our favorite way to fully experience everything they have to offer is with the New Mexico Culture Pass. Find out how to get yours here.

    Subscribe to El Palacio Magazine

    ***

    Encounter Culture, a production of the New Mexico Department of Cultural Affairs, is produced and edited by Andrea Klunder at The Creative Impostor Studios.

    Hosted by Emily Withnall, editor at El Palacio Magazine

    Executive Producer: Daniel Zillmann

    Technical Director & Post-Production Audio: Edwin R. Ruiz

    Recording Engineer: Kabby at Kabby Sound Studios in Santa Fe

    Editor & Production Manager: Alex Riegler

    Theme Music: D’Santi Nava

    Instagram: @newmexicanculture

    For more, visit podcast.nmculture.org.

    Encounter Culture
    enOctober 18, 2023

    Democracy is Indigenous: The Power of the Vote with Laura Harris

    Democracy is Indigenous: The Power of the Vote with Laura Harris

    When Indigenous people vote, they honor their past and forge a better tomorrow for their communities. The act itself remains a complicated exercise. Indigenous voters must contend with a history of colonial rule, the goal of which was to eradicate their way of life, as well as present-day attempts by self-styled “poll watchers” to block their access to polling places or annul their ballots. And yet, democracy has always been Indigenous; a tribe’s power has always rested with its people.

    Welcome to the sixth and final episode in Encounter Culture’s series about the life and legacy of Miguel Trujillo, a collaboration with the New Mexico History Museum. Encounter Culture host Charlotte Jusinski and series co-host Stephanie Padilla speak with the esteemed Laura Harris of Comanche Nation. 

    Laura has extensive experience in national, state, and local campaigns and political fundraising. She’s also the executive director of Americans for Indian Opportunity. The trio discusses advocacy, education, and voting as paths to protecting Indigenous self-determination; they examine threats Indigenous voters face when participating in the electoral process – and finally recap the series.

    This episode was recorded in October 2022. Specific references to campaigning efforts and reported voter suppression tactics are from that election season, but voters continue to face similar challenges.

    Miguel Trujillo's legacy forms the foundation for every conversation in our current series. If you haven’t already, we urge you to catch up on the previous 5 episodes.

    We’d love to hear from you! What did you think of this season’s collaboration with the New Mexico History Museum about Native American Voting Rights Before and After Trujillo v. Garley? Send feedback to elpalacio@dca.nm.gov. You can write a regular email or record a short voice memo and attach it for us to listen to.

    ***

    Visit https://newmexicoculture.org for info about our museums, historic sites, virtual tours, and more. 

    Enter to win a package of four CulturePasses and a one-year subscription to El Palacio magazine all valued at $145 by visiting https://podcast.nmculture.org/giveaway

    Whether you’re a local resident, or you’re visiting us on your travels, CulturePass is your ticket to each of our 15 museums and historic sites.

    Enter by August 31, 2023. You must be 18 years or older to apply and there is no purchase necessary. This opportunity is made possible by the New Mexico Department of Cultural Affairs and the Museum of New Mexico Foundation.

    ***

    Encounter Culture, a production of the New Mexico Department of Cultural Affairs, is produced and edited by Andrea Klunder at The Creative Impostor Studios.

    Hosted by Stephanie Padilla (Isleta, Laguna, Cochiti) & Charlotte Jusinski, Editor at El Palacio Magazine

    Technical Director & Production Audio: Edwin R. Ruiz

    Recording Engineer: Kabby at Kabby Sound Studios in Santa Fe

    Executive Producer:  Daniel Zillmann

    Consulting Producer & Editor: Monica Braine (Assiniboine/Lakota) 

    Associate Producer & Editor: Alex Riegler

    Show Notes: Lisa Widder

    Social Media Design: Caitlin Sunderland

    Theme Music: D’Santi Nava

    Instagram: @newmexicanculture

    For more, visit podcast.nmculture.org.

    Special thank you to Clark Tenakhongva, along with Gary Stroutsos and Matthew Nelson, for the incredible Hopi music featured throughout all 6 episodes of this season. Their new album Hon Muru is set to release in August 2023 and will be available for purchase along with their other recordings on Bandcamp and at ongtupqa.com.

    This season was made possible due to the generosity of the National Endowment for the Humanities and the family of Miguel and Ruchanda Trujillo. 

    Encounter Culture
    enJuly 19, 2023

    You Can Make a Difference in Your Community with Kara Bobroff

    You Can Make a Difference in Your Community with Kara Bobroff

    In this episode, Encounter Culture host Charlotte Jusinski and series co-host Stephanie Padilla, a member of Isleta Pueblo, trace a throughline from Miguel Trujillo to their guest Kara Bobroff (Diné /Lakota), an educator honored by President Barack Obama as one of the best emerging social entrepreneurs in the country. Kara’s exceptional career achievements include her current role as executive director of One Generation (One Gen) and founder of the Native American Community Academy (NACA) and NACA Inspired School Network (NISN).

    If knowledge is power, access is the key to unlocking its potential. Kara has made it her life’s work to provide every Native child a way in. “I think at the center of how I was raised is really being of service to others and understanding that anything is possible. 

    The trio discusses Kara’s incredible personal journey, her commitment to supporting Indigenous youth, and how culturally competent education provides Native communities the tools they need to continue their fight for equal rights and protection.

    This season, Encounter Culture is sharing the story of Miguel Trujillo, an unsung hero of voting rights activism for Native Americans in New Mexico. His legacy forms the foundation for every conversation in our series. If you haven’t already, we urge you to catch up on episodes one, two, three, and four. 

    ***

    Visit https://newmexicoculture.org for info about our museums, historic sites, virtual tours, and more. 

    Enter to win a package of four CulturePasses and a one-year subscription to El Palacio magazine all valued at $145 by visiting https://podcast.nmculture.org/giveaway

    Whether you’re a local resident, or you’re visiting us on your travels, CulturePass is your ticket to each of our 15 museums and historic sites.

    Enter by August 31, 2023. You must be 18 years or older to apply and there is no purchase necessary. This opportunity is made possible by the New Mexico Department of Cultural Affairs and the Museum of New Mexico Foundation.

    ***

    Encounter Culture, a production of the New Mexico Department of Cultural Affairs, is produced and edited by Andrea Klunder at The Creative Impostor Studios.

    Hosted by Stephanie Padilla (Isleta, Laguna, Cochiti) & Charlotte Jusinski, Editor at El Palacio Magazine

    Technical Director & Production Audio: Edwin R. Ruiz

    Recording Engineer: Kabby at Kabby Sound Studios in Santa Fe

    Executive Producer:  Daniel Zillmann

    Consulting Producer & Editor: Monica Braine (Assiniboine/Lakota) 

    Associate Producer & Editor: Alex Riegler

    Show Notes: Lisa Widder

    Social Media Design: Caitlin Sunderland

    Theme Music: D’Santi Nava

    Instagram: @newmexicanculture

    For more, visit podcast.nmculture.org.

    Special thank you to Clark Tenakhongva, along with Gary Stroutsos and Matthew Nelson, for the incredible Hopi music featured throughout all 6 episodes of this season. Their new album Hon Muru is set to release in August 2023 and will be available for purchase along with their other recordings on Bandcamp and at ongtupqa.com.

    This season was made possible due to the generosity of the National Endowment for the Humanities and the family of Miguel and Ruchanda Trujillo. 

    Encounter Culture
    enJuly 12, 2023

    A Generational Shift: Exploring Citizenship and Identity with Dr. Porter Swentzell

    A Generational Shift: Exploring Citizenship and Identity with Dr. Porter Swentzell

    Voter participation often begins with a simple question: Why should I bother? For Indigenous people, the answers come tangled in hundreds of years of broken treaties, systemic racism, and voter access restrictions like those that Miguel Trujillo fought to overturn. And yet, Dr. Porter Swentzell (Santa Clara Pueblo) challenges the notion that engaging with the colonizer’s process can’t work in tribes’ favor.

    Judge June Lorenzo (Laguna Pueblo and Navajo/Diné) agrees. Judge Lorenzo works tirelessly to connect with Indigenous voters and ease their way once at the polls.

    Welcome to the fourth episode in Encounter Culture’s collaboration with the New Mexico History Museum exploring Indigenous voting rights before and after Trujillo v. Garley. If you’ve never heard of the case or the inspiring story of Miguel Trujillo, we encourage you to check out the last three episodes. Then join us here to learn about the complicated realities surrounding Indigenous suffrage with Dr. Porter Swentzell), executive director at Kha’p’o Community School, tribal leader, and invaluable consultant on this project, and June Lorenzo, chief judge of Pueblo of Zia. 

    ***

    Visit https://newmexicoculture.org for info about our museums, historic sites, virtual tours, and more. 

    Enter to win a package of four CulturePasses and a one-year subscription to El Palacio magazine all valued at $145 by visiting https://podcast.nmculture.org/giveaway

    Whether you’re a local resident, or you’re visiting us on your travels, CulturePass is your ticket to each of our 15 museums and historic sites.

    Enter by August 31, 2023. You must be 18 years or older to apply and there is no purchase necessary. This opportunity is made possible by the New Mexico Department of Cultural Affairs and the Museum of New Mexico Foundation.

    ***

    Encounter Culture, a production of the New Mexico Department of Cultural Affairs, is produced and edited by Andrea Klunder at The Creative Impostor Studios.

    Hosted by Stephanie Padilla (Isleta, Laguna, Cochiti) & Charlotte Jusinski, Editor at El Palacio Magazine

    Technical Director & Production Audio: Edwin R. Ruiz

    Recording Engineer: Kabby at Kabby Sound Studios in Santa Fe

    Executive Producer:  Daniel Zillmann

    Consulting Producer & Editor: Monica Braine (Assiniboine/Lakota) 

    Associate Producer & Editor: Alex Riegler

    Show Notes: Lisa Widder

    Social Media Design: Caitlin Sunderland

    Theme Music: D’Santi Nava

    Instagram: @newmexicanculture

    For more, visit podcast.nmculture.org.

    Special thank you to Clark Tenakhongva, along with Gary Stroutsos and Matthew Nelson, for the incredible Hopi music featured throughout all 6 episodes of this season. Their new album Hon Muru is set to release in August 2023 and will be available for purchase along with their other recordings on Bandcamp and at ongtupqa.com.

    This season was made possible due to the generosity of the National Endowment for the Humanities and the family of Miguel and Ruchanda Trujillo. 

    Encounter Culture
    enJuly 05, 2023
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