Storyteller Fern Naomi Renville discusses her talk about The Haudenosaunee Confederacy’s Great Law of Peace, which united six Indigenous Nations in an alliance and helped inspire the US Constitution.
Many Americans don’t believe the scientific consensus. Philosopher Michael Goldsby talks about why, and examines how good people can be led to bad ideas.
by Washington State Poet Laureate Rena Priest.
The grants go to organizations sharing the lesser-known stories of people or communities in our state.
The Duwamish has been a vital waterway for Indigenous peoples for generations. Now it’s largely invisible, drastically reshaped, and among the most polluted rivers in the nation. Can it be saved?
Author and Humanities Washington speaker Clyde W. Ford on the troubling foundations of American prosperity.
Washington State Poet Laureate Rena Priest is calling for submissions to a new poetry anthology about salmon, which she calls “the unsung heroes of our region.”
These sixteen teams of artists and craftspeople will conserve cultural traditions important to Washington’s communities.
Books can get us to empathize with monstrous people. Professor Richard Middleton-Kaplan believes that’s not only a good thing, but a vital part of human rights work.
Libraries, schools, and museums can receive $25,000 and more to hold the innovative literacy program in their communities.