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Media
Articles, interviews, and press coverage featuring NAIS core faculty and staff, spotlighting their research, teaching, and public scholarship on Native American and Indigenous Studies.
Beth Michel
Senior Associate Director, Center for Native American and Indigenous Studies
Michel is a frequent voice in regional and national coverage of Native American affairs, higher education, and Muscogee-Emory partnerships.
Michel is a frequent voice in regional and national coverage of Native American affairs, higher education, and Muscogee-Emory partnerships.
Heidi Aklaseaq Senungetuk
Assistant Teaching Professor of Music
A violinist and ethnomusicologist, Senungetuk's research and performances on Indigenous Arctic music are regularly featured in Emory's arts and faculty research coverage.
A violinist and ethnomusicologist, Senungetuk's research and performances on Indigenous Arctic music are regularly featured in Emory's arts and faculty research coverage.
Malinda Maynor Lowery
Cahoon Family Professor of American History
A historian and documentary filmmaker, Lowery is widely interviewed on Lumbee history, Indigenous foodways, and her work bringing Native stories to film.
A historian and documentary filmmaker, Lowery is widely interviewed on Lumbee history, Indigenous foodways, and her work bringing Native stories to film.

ASU - "Foodways and Nostalgia in the Italian Peninsula and the American Southeast"

Podcast - Dr. Malinda Lowery & Hannah Goins | Lumbeeland

Salvation South - "Deluxe: The Ones Who Were Here Before Us - Uncovering America's Indian Boarding School Program"

Humanities - "Malinda Maynor Lowery Explores Indigenous Connections Across Race and Religion"

Border Belt - "Trump promises full recognition for the Lumbee. He’d still have to go through Congress"

Making Lumbeeland: An Interview with Malinda Maynor Lowery
Emil' Keme
Professor of English and Indigenous Studies
A K'iche' Maya scholar and poet, Keme appears in national and campus media discussing Indigenous literatures, Maya cultural resurgence, and community-based storytelling.
A K'iche' Maya scholar and poet, Keme appears in national and campus media discussing Indigenous literatures, Maya cultural resurgence, and community-based storytelling.





