Winter Eliot 2014 �Blackfeet Animal Persons: alter-Native Perspectives of Nature� with Jack Gladstone

Sunday, December 28, 2014 at 06:30 AM
Thursday, January 01, 2015 at 05:00 AM
Winter Eliot �Blackfeet Animal Persons: alter-Native Perspectives of Nature� with Jack Gladstone
Jack Gladstone

From an illuminating panorama of personification, Jack guides his audience through the traditional Blackfeet perspective of kinship and connection with all creation.

Jack Gladstone is a lyric storyteller from the Blackfeet Nation of Montana.  Regarded as a cultural bridge builder, Jack showcases American Indian experience through a rich mosaic of music, lyric poetry, and spoken narrative. A former college instructor, Jack co-founded Glacier Park’s nationally renowned lecture series, “Native America Speaks”. After 29 seasons, this program is the longest running indigenous speaker series in the history of the National Park Service. Jack has created fifteen critically acclaimed CDs. In October 2011, “Native Anthropology,” subtitled “Challenge, Choice, and Promise in the 21st Century”, garnered the prestigious “Best Historical Recording”
from the Native American Music Association. In 2012, Jack was called twice to perform in Washington DC at the Smithsonian Museum of the American Indian. In the spring of 2013, Jack became the first Montanan to receive the C.M. Russell Heritage Award, given to honor his contribution to the legacy, culture, and life of the American West. In October, Jack will be inducted into the University of Washington Alumni Hall of Fame in Seattle, Washington for his work in the field of communication.

Winter Eliot 2014 �Blackfeet Animal Persons: alter-Native Perspectives of Nature� with Jack Gladstone

Location

13395 Lagoon Drive NW; Seabeck, WA 98380