The new documentary, “Joan Baez I Am A Noise,” follows the legendary singer-songwriter on her farewell tour while exploring her decades-long career of music and activism. Joan Baez joins us, and takes your calls.
A new exhibition features more than one hundred historical, modern, and contemporary clay works. It’s titled, Grounded in Clay: The Spirit of Pueblo Pottery, and it’s the first community-curated Native American exhibition in the history of The Metropolitan Museum of Art. Patricia Marroquin Norby (Purรฉpecha), the associate curator of Native American Art at The Met, and visual artist Michael Namingha (Ohkay Owingeh-Hopi) joins us to talk about the show on display through June 4.
A new book flips the narrative of “discovery” on its head, and investigates the history of the first Indigenous Americans to arrive in Europe, what their lives were like, and what their impressions were of European society. Author and historian Caroline Dodds Pennock joins us to discuss her book, On Savage Shores: How Indigenous Americans Discovered Europe.
A new docuseries on HBO follows a group of Indigenous police recruits that demonstrates the challenges of life on the Navajo reservation. We speak to co-directors, Kahlil Hudson, Alex Jablonski and David Nordstrom about “Navajo Police: Class 57,” which premieres on HBO on October 17.
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