Media
How America’s First Banned Book Survived and Became an Anti-Authoritarian Icon
Interviewed by Colleen Connolly
At the 16th annual Keller Center Innovation Forum on Thursday, Oct. 7, 2021, the Native American and Indigenous Studies Initiative at Princeton (NAISIP) proposal by Professor of English and American Studies Sarah Rivett received third place in the humanities and social sciences category.
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Resilience in the time of COVID, a body of work about women and the hidden burdens of the Coronavirus
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“It’s Useful to know”
by center for culture society and religion at princeton university
In this episode of "It's Useful to Know", Dr. Sarah Rivett talks about how popular fictions about American history make some communities' experiences invisible, in this case indigenous communities. She also compares the symbolism of the Raven in Haida and Tlingit literature and Anglo-Christian literature.
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Article Features
Humanities Council Awards Grant to Launch Native American & Indigenous Studies Working Group
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Council Grant Establishes New Working Group for Native American and Indigenous Studies
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‘Unscripted America’: Rivett Explores Native American Linguistic Contributions to American Literature
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The Language of America. Behind the Research: Sarah Rivett, English & American studies