April 17, 2024

Fragments that Heal: Archaeology, Historical Trauma, and Multivocal Storytelling in Historic Greenwood

Class Details

Fragments that Heal: Archaeology, Historical Trauma, and Multivocal Storytelling in Historic Greenwood

 This multi-day travel course will not only help students understand what sparked the birth of the Historic Greenwood District and the hate that surrounded this prosperous community but go beyond the Tulsa Race Massacre to explore the roles that Black people played in making Oklahoma history. Using archives, artifacts, cultural landscapes, art, and multivocal storytelling, students will learn the power of archaeology and vernacular history collection to challenge mainstream, single story narratives of history and reimagine the legacy of Black Wall Street for themselves. Divided into three parts, this course explores the historical context of the past, the tools used in the present to interrogate this history, and how the future generation can heal from the historical trauma that lingers in the present day. Each student will learn how to weave the living history of Greenwood into either a digital memory quilt or a black out poem to build their own multivocal story from this course experience, using multiple layers of evidence and ways of knowing about the world. By the end of our course, students will be introduced to the field of archaeology and the practice of healing through artistic expression but also have the opportunity to strengthen their skills in critical thinking, trauma-informed standards in learning, community-engaged research, analysis of historical sources, and digital storytelling. 

Enrollment

  • Enrollment through your home campus; contact your local OSLEP campus coordinator for information
  • OSLEP provides all required reading materials at no additional cost-NO books to buy!
  • Housing and meals provided
  • In-person residential seminar
  • This seminar will be limited to 12 student participants
Start Date
April 17, 2024
End Date
April 21, 2024
Location
Tulsa, OK
Course Credits
3
Application Deadline
March 1, 2024
Dr. Alicia Odewale

Scholar

Dr. Alicia Odewale

Executive Director, Archaeology Rewritten

As an African Diaspora Archaeologist with a background in Restorative Justice, Antiracist, Black

Feminist, and Community-centered Archaeology, Dr. Odewale researches sites of African heritage in the US and Caribbean region. She also leads the archaeological and educational consulting firm, Archaeology Rewritten. In the field, she is the co-director of the research project, Mapping Historical Trauma in Tulsa from 1921-2021, which uses archaeology to understand more about the survivance of Greenwood and Black community resilience after the 1921 Tulsa Race Massacre. Paired with this ongoing research project is an accompanying field school offering free training in archaeological survey and mapping plus paid internships for students who reside in Oklahoma.

When she is not in the field, Dr. Odewale enjoys teaching and mentoring students at all levels, from elementary to PhD. Hailing from a long line of educators, she uses archaeology both inside and outside of the classroom as a lens to view but also change history. Currently she teaches both online and in-person as part of Black History Saturdays in Tulsa, OK, working alongside a coalition of educators to ensure Black History is taught in Oklahoma despite the legislative removal of culturally informed lessons from our school curriculums. Through her work with Rice University, National Geographic Society, and HBCUs across the country, she teaches undergraduate and graduate courses while sharing Greenwoods story and her journey to becoming an archaeologist with students around the world. Now thanks to a grant from National Geographic Society, her and her co-director are launching the first archaeology curriculum in Greenwood designed to blend lessons of archaeology, history, genealogy, and archival research and led by archaeologists and descendants.

As a Speaker for National Geographic LIVE and Lead Tulsa Storyteller for 2892 Miles to Go: Geographic Walk for Justice, Dr. Odewale continues to share the power of archaeology and Black community resilience through her National Geographic Live show Greenwood: A Century of Resilience, as well as an ongoing partnership with HBCUs and the Disney on the Yard program. Leading up to this national speaking tour, she also starred in the Emmy Award winning documentary, Dreamland: The Burning of Black Wall Street”, now streaming on HBO Max and CNNGo. Her work with National Geographic, 2892, Film makers, and other media outlets provide an opportunity for her to go beyond the classroom and traditional academic publications to share her work in new and innovative ways with the world.

Dr. Odewale continues to be a fierce advocate for the inclusion of archaeology in the classroom and in the history of Greenwood, while pushing for increased diversity in academia and across the field of archaeology. She is both a living descendant of a survivor of the 1921 Tulsa Race Massacre and a graduate of Booker T. Washington High School, a historically Black high school created during Oklahomas Jim Crow era and one of the few structures that survived the attack on Greenwood in 1921.

Through her role as a board member for the Nat Geo Oklahoma Advisory Council and leader of the non-profit organization, The Greenwood Diaspora Project, she now works alongside a team of community advocates to both recognize and fill in gaps in funding for students and teachers in North Tulsa while sharing a mission to reconnect families across the Greenwood Diaspora back to their roots in Oklahoma.

Class Prep

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