Relations of Salt and Stars Titelbild

Relations of Salt and Stars

Von: Pacific Islands Studies at the University of Utah
  • Inhaltsangabe

  • Our ancestors traveled through salt and stars, and so do contemporary Pacific Islander communities today. Relations of Salt and Stars is a new podcast produced by the Pacific Islands Studies program at the University of Utah, and hosted by faculty members Dr. Angela Robinson (Chuukese) and Dr. Maile Arvin (Native Hawaiian). In this podcast, we consider how to build good relations - with the communities we come from in Oceania, the communities we live with here in the Salt Lake City area, and especially the Indigenous communities whose lands we live on. As Pacific Islander people who live in Utah, we are nourished by the lands of the Ute, Goshute, Shoshone, and Paiute peoples. We are far from the ocean, but close to the salt water of the Great Salt Lake. We are far from the night sky over our home islands, but can look up and see the same stars. With the name “Relations of Salt and Stars,” then, we invoke the ties historically forged between the Pacific Islands and Utah, as well as the ones still in formation. Join us as we explore and build relations of salt and stars.
    © 2022
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  • Dissertation Things & First Talanoa with Dr. Maile Arvin
    Apr 12 2024

    In this episode of Relations of Salt and Stars, Kehaulani Folau discusses her theoretical framework, methodology, and highlights of her first talanoa with Dr. Maile Arvin! Kehau highlights Dr. Arvin’s formidable moments of her educational journey, and shares her reflections of her talanoa with Dr. Arvin.

    References

    Arvin, M., Tuck, E., & Morrill, A. (2020). Decolonizing feminism: Challenging connections between settler colonialism and heteropatriarchy. In Feminist Theory Reader (pp. 169-180). Routledge.

    Andreotti, V. (2021). Hospicing modernity: Facing humanity’s wrongs and the implications for social activism. Berkeley: North Atlantic Books.

    Dr. Hi‘ilei Hobart Book Celebration, March 2023. Cooling the Tropics book discussion with author Dr. Hi'ilei Hobart. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=D0iC62KxcJ8&t=2406s

    Grande, S. (2021). Pedagogies of Mourning and Morning [conference keynote address]. Association for the Study of Higher Education.

    Grande, S. (2018). Refusing the university. In Toward what justice? (pp. 47-65). Routledge.

    Kaʻili, T. O. (2017). Marking indigeneity: The Tongan art of sociospatial relations. University of Arizona Press.

    Lopesi, L. (2021). Moana Cosmopolitan Imaginaries: Toward an Emerging Theory of Moana Art (Doctoral dissertation, Auckland University of Technology).

    Nā Lei Poina ‘Ole (Beloved Children Never Forgotten) at https://naleipoinaole.com/blog

    Tecun, A. (2019). Rootz Vaka Transits: Traversing seas of urban diasporic indigeneity by collapsing time and space with the songs and stories of the kava canoe (Doctoral dissertation, The University of Auckland)

    Trask, H. K. (1999). From a native daughter: Colonialism and sovereignty in Hawaii (Revised edition). University of Hawaii Press.

    Vaughn, K. (2022). Birthing Educational Pathways: Pacific Feminisms and the Ethics of Kuleana and Kinship. Amerasia Journal, 48(2), 145-157.

    Wilder, C. S. (2013). Ebony and ivy: Race, slavery, and the troubled history of America's universities. Bloomsbury Publishing USA.

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    47 Min.
  • Prologue to Season 2: A Madau-Moana Cosmopolitan Feminist R.I.P. to Deacademy
    Feb 23 2024

    Show Notes

    In this season of Relations of Salt and Stars, Kehau Folau highlights different parts of her dissertation journey. In this episode, she introduces herself, this season’s theme, which is also their dissertation project- A Madau-Moana Cosmopolitan Feminist R.I.P. to Deacademy, and wraps up with their shameless call for participants to join her research study. 

    Find out more about Pacific Island Studies at the University of Utah by visiting our website at: https://transform.utah.edu/pi-studies/. 

    You can also follow us on Facebook at Utah Pacific Islands Studies: https://www.facebook.com/uofustudies.  We are also on Instagram @uofupistudies: https://www.instagram.com/uofupistudies 

    References

    Relations to Start and Stars | Prologue to Season 1: Planting Good Relations: https://relations-of-salt-and-stars.castos.com/episodes/prologue-to-season-1-planting-good-relations 

    Meyer, M. A. (2013). Holographic epistemology: Native common sense. China Media Research, 9(2), 94-101.

    Tecun, A. (2022). Knew world undercurrents. In A. Tecun, L. Lopesi, and A. Sankar (Eds.), Towards a Grammar of Race in Aotearoa New Zealand (pp. 76-89). Bridget Williams Books; Wellington, New Zealand. 

    Lopesi, L. (2021). Moana Cosmopolitan Imaginaries: Toward an Emerging Theory of Moana Art. [Doctoral dissertation, Auckland University of Technology]. 

    More information about Kehau Folau’s research project visit: https://forms.gle/7RmgvrfRGSgaKiiR7 or email her at kehaulani.folau@utah.edu.

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    10 Min.
  • What Our Gardens Teach Us (Part 2)
    Mar 18 2023

    This is Part 2 of our episode about gardens: what they teach us, the medicine they offer, and the connections they allow us to make between the lands we live on and our homelands. Maile shares some highlights of our November event, Planting Good Relations, which featured a panel discussion with a number of Native American and Pacific Islander leaders who steward community gardens here in the Salt Lake City area. She also shares her own story about gardening, Hawaiian language, and parenting.

    As we said in Part 1, this land in Salt Lake City is Ute, Goshute, Paiute, and Shoshone land. None of us are of these peoples; we all have homelands elsewhere. As we talk and think about gardening this land, we want to come into better relation with these peoples and this place. As you’ll hear, many of our panelists are doing this work by offering medicine grown in these gardens to the community and by creating space for Indigenous youth and families to find healing or to just be.  

    Check out Part 1 of this episode published back on our podcast in December 2022.

    You are also able to watch a video of this panel, or listen to the full audio of the panel on our YouTube page, the Pasifika Archive, with the handle @thepasifikaarchive2650.

    Please check out the full bios and links to our panelists’ organizations below to learn more about their work and how you can support it.  

    Denae Shanidiin, Diné and Korean artist and consultant, is asdzáán born to the Diné (Navajo) Nation. She is Honágháahnii, One-Walks-Around Clan, born to the Korean race on her Father’s side. Kinłichíi’nii, the Red House People is her Maternal Grandfather’s Clan and the Bilagáana, White People, is her Paternal Grandfather’s Clan.

    Shanidiin’s work reveals the importance of Indigenous spirituality and sovereignty. Her work brings awareness to many contemporary First Nation issues including Missing and Murdered Indigenous People, land body violence, and restoring beauty and balance through reclaiming our Indigenous lifeways.

    Shanidiin in partnership with other relatives founded the Carry The Water Garden: an Indigenous Healing Garden in the Salt Lake Valley.

    Dee Platero is a member of the Navajo Nation born for Edge of the Water clan. She is a Technical Consultant and finds opportunities through work and play to help Indigenous led efforts. She enjoys staying active and is a continual learner. Dee looks forward to each unique creative space Pandos facilitates and is grateful for the opportunitiy to elevate Pandos voices.

    Michelle Brown is a Dinè activist born into “The Water Flows Together” Clan. She is committed to serve her community and bring attention to everyday and historic issues that indigenous peoples face with emphasis on Murdered and Missing Indigenous Peoples. She currently serves as Chair to MMIW+ Utah and relies heavily on her belief that learning is ever evolving.

    Lisia “Sia” Satini, a Community Health Workers Director for the Utah Pacific Islander Health Coalition (UPIHC) born in San Mateo, California to Sesikuana Finau (

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    47 Min.

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