Events

Upcoming

EIHS Public Lecture: “Species Insurance”: Harriet Tubman, Environmental Storytelling, and Historical Modes of Survival

Join Tiya for a lecture followed by book signings with light refreshments. Literati Bookstore will be selling copies of Tiya’s book.

From the event announcement: Borrowing the words of Octavia E. Butler for theoretical inspiration, this talk engages in a thought experiment. What if we were to take Harriet Tubman, one of the most famous historical figures in the US, and center her in an environmental story? What would we learn about Tubman herself? What would we notice about Black women in the nineteenth century and the role of place and ecology in their survival? And what connections might we draw between Black women’s environmental thinking in the multi-temporal past and the greatest challenges facing our species in the murky present and future?

AN EVENING WITH TIYA MILES: AUTHOR OF ALL THAT SHE CARRIED

In partnership with the McCord Stewart Museum and CBC Ideas, Tiya will give a talk in celebration of her 2022 Cundill History Prize winning book All That She Carried: The Journey of Ashley’s Sack, a Black Family Keepsake, which traces the life of a single rough cotton bag handed down through three generations of Black women to craft an extraordinary testament to people who are left out of the archives.

Tiya will be introduced by Cynthia Cooper, Head of Collections and Research Curator of Dress, Fashion and Textiles at the McCord Stewart Museum, who will explore how Dr. Miles’ work breaks ground for research that centres textiles within decolonizing narratives and inspires future directions for material culture studies.

In the second half of the evening, Nahlah Ayed, host of CBC’s Ideas, will interview Dr. Miles for later broadcast on the program, drawing on Dr. Miles’ earlier talk and exploring her work since winning the 2022 Cundill History Prize.

This is a free event. Doors open at 5:30 p.m. Please arrive 15 minutes ahead to secure your seat.

Discussion in English, simultaneous translation in French will be available.

 


Past

All That We Carry

Where do we go from here?

Join Tiya and over 50 Black Award-Winning authors and writers at the in-person 17th National Black Writers Conference (NBWC2024) March 20 – 23, 2024 in Brooklyn, NY.

Roundtable discussions and other events of this four-day public gathering will explore several issues in the world of Black writing and publishing, including the impact of environmental and systemic racism, the impact of social media, and the need for peace and emotional healing. Confirmed speakers include one of four honorees, Percival Everett (of American Fiction fame), plus Edwidge Danticat, Michael Eric DysonKaren HunterKevin PowellJacqueline WoodsonMarc Lamont HillBettina Love, and other best-selling and award-winning writers. Read the announcement.

More information about the event.

 


Celebrate International Women’s Month and Harriet Jacobs

Honor International Women’s Month and Harriet Jacobs

Tiya will be offering remarks about Harriet Jacobs during the program.

Join Mayor E. Denise Simmons and the Harriet Jacobs Legacy Committee to celebrate the issuance of a new U.S. Postal Service stamp featuring Harriet Jacobs and The Underground Railroad freedom seekers. The program will be from 1-1:30pm and a reception will follow.


African American history through the eyes of the women who lived it

Tiya Miles: All That She Carried

Join Tiya at an event hosted by The John Adams Institute for a deep look into African American history through the eyes of one family and the importance of storytelling and resilience to set the historical record straight.

Moderator: Jennifer Tosch
In collaboration with: Fulbright Commission the Netherlands and Singel Uitgeverijen


Tiya Miles at Harvard Book Store

Tiya will be at the Harvard Book Store for a discussion of her new book Wild Girls: How the Outdoors Shaped the Women Who Challenged a Nation.

This event is FREE.


Tiya Miles with Wild Girls: How the Outdoors Shaped the Women Who Challenged a Nation

Tiya will join Laurel Thatcher Ulrich to talk about the natural world and the women who changed America. This online event will be moderated by Laurel Thatcher Ulrich, Professor Emerita, Harvard University.

Registration is required to attend and a signed copy of the book is included with registration.


Beyond the Page with American Historian Tiya Miles

GBH and Beyond the Page are excited to kick off the 2023 Boston Book Festival! In celebration, they will talk with Tiya, a public historian and creative writer whose research focuses on African American, Native American and women’s history during colonial America.

Register now for this free event. Signed copies of Wild Girls are available at check out when registering for this event.


In Being Bold

The November 7 edition of “Seriously Entertaining” is a partner event between House of SpeakEasy and W. W. Norton & Company to celebrate Norton’s 100th anniversary and the launch of Norton Shorts, a new series of short books by leading scholars. This show will feature authors in the series, a venture “in being bold.”

Tiya will be speaking at this event along with authors Ashley Shew, Ruha Benjamin, and Dennis Yi Tenen.


The Cherokee Rose – A Conversation and Book Signing with Tiya Miles

Tiya is launching her latest book, The Cherokee Rose, in Tulsa on May 27th. Join for an author chat and book signing.

The event starts at 12pm CDT.


Tell Her Story

Join biographer and Tufts professor Julie Dobrow, facilitating a conversation between Tomiko Brown-Nagin, Dean of the Radcliffe Institute and author of Civil Rights Queen: Constance Baker Motley and the Struggle for Equality, and Tiya Miles, Harvard Professor of History and author of All That She Carried, winner of the 2021 National Book Award.

This event is hosted by the Massachusetts Historical Society.


The 1835 Lecture: Tiya Miles

Cincinnati native and National Book Award Winner Tiya Miles delivers the 1835 Lecture at The Mercantile Library.

Free to members/$20 nonmembers
6 pm reception/6:30 pm program

Copies of All That She Carried will be available for sale & signing courtesy of Joseph-Beth Cincinnati.


Book Club – All That She Carried by Tiya Miles

Monday, April 3, join the final Book Club of 2022-2023 in a discussion on All That She Carried: The Journey of Ashley’s Sack, a Black Family Keepsake by Tiya Miles. Presented by Massey Senior Fellow and Alum, Kyle Wyatt (Editor-in-Chief of the Literary Review of Canada).

8:00-9:15pm in the Upper Library following formal dinner.

A Zoom will be available as well.


Lectures in Criticism: Tiya Miles on “Species Insurance: Black Women, Survival Craft, and Environmental Storytelling”

On February 23rd, please join Lectures in Criticism and the BU Center for the Humanities for our Spring lecture.  Tiya will be presenting her lecture titled “Species Insurance: Black Women, Environmental Storytelling, and Survival.”

This event is open to the public. The lecture will begin at 5:30 pm in the Colloquium Room at the BU Photonics Center and be followed by a public reception.


Harvard’s award-winning Tiya Miles to host webinar, Feb. 6

Tiya Miles, author of six books on African American and Indigenous history, will discuss her latest book, All That She Carried: The Journey of Ashley’s Sack, A Black Family Keepsake. The webinar is set for Monday, Feb. 6 from 7-8:30 p.m. via Zoom.

This event is sponsored by the College of Liberal Arts & Education, Black Abolitionist Archive, Student Life Office and the African American Studies and Women’s and Gender Studies programs, University of Detroit Mercy.


tiya smiling with arms folded leaning against a wall and Nicka smiling in a yellow blouse with her hand on her neck.

We are Facing History: Personal Stories, Identities, and our Connected Past

A conversation with Dr. Tiya Miles & Nicka Sewell-Smith exploring how personal histories inform individual and collective identities.

Tiya and Senior Story Producer at Ancestry, Nicka Sewell-Smith, discussed how our personal histories inform our identities and perception of the world, and the systemic barriers which deny many Americans the opportunity to engage with their own histories. Learn more.

Video of the event is available to watch at any time. You may be prompted to log in to your Facing History account. Watch now.

Presented by Facing History and Ourselves in partnership with Ancestry®.


Charleston Literary Festival: Tiya Miles with Kameelah Martin: Ashley’s Sack

Tiya will be a speaker at this year’s Charleston Literary Festival. She’ll discuss “the tears of things” with Kameelah Martin, Director of African American Studies at the College of Charleston.

The Festival will present programs, both in-person and virtually, between November 4 and 13, 2022.


PBS LearningMedia offering free webinar for educators on teaching inclusive U.S. history

In partnership with GBH and the National Council for the Social Studies, PBS LearningMedia is offering a free webinar for educators on how to use material culture to teach inclusive U.S. history Oct. 19 at 7 p.m. ET.

Tiya will join the GBH Education social studies team as one of the presenters.

Join for a discussion and specific examples of how material culture can inspire students to be creators and keepers of their own history. Activities and resources on PBS LearningMedia will be shared that can support teaching U.S. History more inclusively.


Register now for the 2022 Diversity Forum, featuring keynote by historian Tiya Miles

Registration is now open to attend the 2022 UW–Madison Diversity Forum — “The Power of Remembering: Reclaiming Our Legacies to Imagine New Futures” — which will be held Nov. 14 & 15 at Union South with options to participate in-person and online. As always, the Diversity Forum is free and open to the public.

Tiya will be giving the 2022 Diversity Forum’s keynote address.

Conference Details

  • Dates: November 14 & 15, 2022
  • Times: 9 a.m. – 4 p.m. Central Time (times are subject to change)

Tiya Miles with Mary Bergman: All That She Carried

June 17th, Tiya will be at The Nantucket Book Festival to discuss All That She Carried with Mary Bergman.

About the event:

Tiya Miles with Mary Bergman: All That She Carried

“Acclaimed author Tiya Miles’ National Book Award-winning All That She Carried: The Journey of Ashley’s Sack, a Black Family Keepsake is a powerful story of resilience and love passed down against steep odds. Miles, a professor at Harvard University, knows intimately the power of history to help us understand the present. In a world where everything seems uncertain, Miles’ work helps us muster our own courage to meet the changes ahead.”


all that she carried paperback cover

The American Antiquarian Society

Join Tiya as she discusses her new book All That She Carried: The Journey of Ashley’s Sack, a Black Family Keepsake , a captivating story about women, mothers and daughters, who chose the profundity of love over dehumanizing conditions.

This online event is free, but registration is required. You will be sent an email with a link and instructions on how to join the event upon registration. Closed captioning is available as an option for this program via Zoom’s live transcription.


2022 EMSI Distinguished Lecturers: Tiya Miles

Event hosted by USC Dornsife Early Modern Studies Institute (EMSI).

Event start time for folks on the West Coast: 1:00pm – 2:00pm (PT)


Join Tiya at the 3rd Annual National Antiracist Book Festival

On Enslavement and Memory with Clint Smith and Tiya Miles
How do we memorialize the past as the nation’s collective memory and history stand at odds? Smith and Miles provide multifaceted understandings of the past to grapple with the legacy of slavery.

Tiya will be presenting with author Clint Smith at 5pm.

The National Antiracist Book Festival is the first and only book festival that brings together, showcases, and celebrates the nation’s leading antiracist writers. It is hosted every April by the Boston University Center for Antiracist Research.

The virtual panels are topically organized with authors and a moderator. Hosting, promoting, and selling the books from each panel is a different bookstore owned and operated by people of color.

This is an all-day event from 9am-6pm.


Women’s History Month Sundays@Home: All That She Carried by Tiya Miles

Join the NWHM and Dr. Martha S. Jones in conversation with Dr. Tiya Miles, author of All That She Carried, on Sundays@Home with live Q&A. Watch the recorded event.

This National Women’s History Museum Sundays@Home program is co-presented with DC Public Library with generous underwriting support from Time Warner Media.

More information about this event and video of past events on NWHM website.


event flyer with authors Tiya Miles and Hanif Abdurraquib and hot pink background

Underlying Issues — March 2022

Join Tiya and Hanif Abdurraquib, another award winning author, at Harrietts Bookshop for a special episode of Underlying Issues on the topic SOCIAL CONTRACTS. Underlying Issues is an event to meet with authors to talk contemporary issues from a literary perspective.


RACE TALKS Books + Conversations: “All That She Carried”

Tiya will join RACE TALKS as they launch the first event in the RACE TALKS Books + Conversations series with All That She Carried: The Journey of Ashley’s Sack, A Black Family Keepsake. Join Michelle Lewis, co-owner of Third Eye Books, Oregon’s only Black-owned brick-and-mortar bookstore in Oregon, in a discussion and Q&A session with Tiya about the her award-winning book.

This is a HYBRID event at McMenamins Kennedy School in Portland, OR and on Zoom.

 


A Simple Cotton Sack: A Conversation about African American Women, Trauma, and Resistance

Conversations at the Newberry

Guest speakers: Tiya and Megan Sweeney

This free event is open to the public and will be hosted virtually on Zoom.

NOTE: You can also watch a live stream of the program on the Newberry Facebook page or on our YouTube channel.


Celebrating Harriet Powers and Quilt Stories

Celebrate the life and work of Harriet Powers to mark the unique opportunity in which her Bible quilt and Pictorial quilt are on display together for the first time in the exhibition “Fabric of a Nation: American Quilt Stories.” Hear from artists, historians, and curators as they discuss and reflect on the art and achievements of Harriet Powers.

Speakers

Bisa Butler, artist
Kyra Hicks, author, quilter, and quilt historian
Dr. Carolyn Mazloomi, NEA Bess Lomax Hawes National Heritage Fellow, United States Artists Fellow
Dr. Tiya Miles, professor of History, Radcliffe Alumnae Professor, Harvard University


book cover

Historically Speaking: All That She Carried: The Journey of Ashley’s Sack, a Black Family Keepsake with Dr. Tiya Miles

NMAAHC’s Robert Frederick Smith Explore Your Family History Center hosts author and historian Tiya A. Miles of Harvard University as she metaphorically unpacks the bag, deepening its emotional resonance and exploring the meanings and significance of everything it contained — and crafts an extraordinary testament to the people often left out of our nation’s stories and archives.

Current finalist for the 2021 National Book Award for nonfiction, All That She Carried tells the story of Ashley’s sack, an object handed down through three generations of Black women and later displayed at the National Museum of African American History and Culture.

 


History Keynote at the Boston Book Festival

Tiya will join Lee Pelton, President and CEO of the Boston Foundation, for a discussion of her book All That She Carried: The Journey of Ashley’s Sack, a Black Family Keepsake.

The Boston Book Festival presents year-round events and an annual festival that promotes a culture of reading. The festival is online this year from October 16-23.


Charleston Literary Festival

Tiya will speak at this year’s Charleston Literary Festival — speaking time and date to be announced.

The festival runs from November 5-14. This year Charleston Literary Festival will bring together more than 30 renowned authors, thought leaders, and academics in South Carolina. There will be around 24 events altogether, a mixture of in-person and virtual sessions, on topics ranging from history, civil rights, feminism, science, biography, classical and contemporary fiction, and more.

 


The Other Slavery: Histories of Indian Bondage from New Spain to the Southwestern United States

Join the Smithsonian for a virtual symposium that explores the hidden stories of enslaved Indigenous peoples, focusing on the legacy of Spanish colonization in the Americas and Asia and its impact on what is now the southwestern United States.

Tiya will be one of the experts to discuss the legacies of Native American enslavement with Indigenous community leaders and cultural workers. The symposium will explore the different forms and complexity of human bondage that resulted in hybrid cultures, tangled economic practices, and intricate social relationships between the Spanish and Indigenous communities. Overall, this program seeks to give a comprehensive “first voice” to these hushed stories and living legacies.

The symposium is presented by the Smithsonian Latino Center, the National Museum of the American Indian, and the National Museum of African American History and Culture in association with the Smithsonian’s initiative, Our Shared Future: Reckoning with Our Racial Past.


Brooklyn Book Festival: Driven by the Living Past

Tiya will be a featured author at the Brooklyn Book Festival – an always-free celebration of books from September 26-October 4, 2021. This year’s #BKBF is hybrid, with both virtual and in-person programming. From the event announcement:

“When critical analysis and even basic facts of American history are under attack, regarding events of four centuries ago or from earlier this year, what can we learn from stories of Black life that have been distorted, immortalized, or lost? How can African American storytelling traditions help charge and change what we understand about our lives today? Join us for a conversation on the intersecting power of Black cultural legacies and America’s national collective memory, with Farah Jasmine Griffin (Read Until You Understand: The Profound Wisdom of Black Life and Literature), Tiya Miles (All That She Carried: The Journey of Ashley’s Sack, a Black Family Keepsake), and Clint Smith (How the Word Is Passed: A Reckoning with the History of Slavery Across America). Moderated by arts leader Rob Fields.”


tiya smiling in white sweater

Book Talk with Tiya Miles

The second installment in the summer series of Virtual Radcliffe Book Talks will feature Tiya Miles, author of All That She Carried: The Journey of Ashley’s Sack, a Black Family Keepsake.

Tiya’s reading will be followed by a discussion with Tomiko Brown-Nagin, dean of Harvard Radcliffe Institute, Daniel P.S. Paul Professor of Constitutional Law at Harvard Law School, professor of history in the Harvard Faculty of Arts and Sciences, and chair of the Presidential Committee on Harvard and the Legacy of Slavery. The event will also include an audience Q and A. Watch the recorded event here.

This program is presented as part of the Presidential Initiative on Harvard and the Legacy of Slavery, a University-wide effort housed at Harvard Radcliffe Institute.


All That She Carried: A Conversation with Tiya Miles

Join Tiya at the Concord Museum where she’ll discuss her new book, All That She Carried: The Journey of Ashley’s Sack, a Black Family Keepsake, a story about women, mothers, and daughters, who chose the profundity of love over dehumanizing condition. At the heart of this moving tale is a rough cotton bag, given by an enslaved woman named Rose to her daughter, Ashley, before their forced separation. More information about the event.


Meet Author Tiya Miles

Tiya will introduce her book and share the story of how she uncovered the history of Rose’s, Ashley’s, and Ruth’s lives and reveal the contents of Ashley’s sack and the significance and meaning of what it held. St. Mary’s County Library is hosting this online event. More information about the event.


DISTINGUISHED SPEAKERS SERIES: TIYA MILES

Middleton Place Foundation in partnership with the International African American Museum and the Harvard Peabody Museum invites you to join author Tiya Miles for a discussion about her latest book,  All That She Carried.  This extraordinary book traces the life of Ashley’s sack handed down through three generations of Black women. It is a poignant story of resilience and of love passed down through generations of women against steep odds.
The ZOOM webinar is free, however, registration is required.

All That She Carried with Tiya Miles

Join the Bidwell House Museum on June 9th for our first summer lecture of the 2021 season with Historian and Author Tiya Miles.

This program will be held via Zoom and registration is required. The Zoom details to access the lecture will be sent a few days in advance to all attendees.

Sponsored by The Upper Housatonic Valley National Heritage Area


The Black Experience in Early Cambridge

Harriet Jacobs is best known for her autobiography, Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl, in which she chronicles her enslavement in North Carolina, her subsequent period in hiding in a tiny attic garret, and her eventual escape north to freedom. But Jacobs was also for many years a resident of Cambridge, where she ran boarding houses and was part of a network of Cambridge women working for the abolition of slavery and equal social, political and economic rights for Black Americans.

Join the History Café on Friday, May 21, at 5:00 p.m. ET via Zoom as they explore the world of Harriet Jacobs’ Cambridge with Dr. Tiya Miles, Radcliffe Alumnae Professor of History at Harvard University. This History Café program will feature Tiya in conversation with several of her students as they discuss their work on Cambridge’s women abolitionists and the place that Jacobs occupied at its center.

Thanks to the generous support of the Massachusetts Society of the Cincinnati and a grant from the Bridge Street Fund, a special initiative of Mass Humanities, this program is free and open to the public. Register for the Zoom link.


The 2021 Stephanie M.H. Camp Endowed Lecture

“A Tattered Dress”: Materiality and Memory in the Lives of Enslaved Women

This talk will highlight artifacts of Black women’s material culture to consider ways that objects can help us recover experiential aspects of the gendered Black past. Together, we will unpack Ashley’s Sack, the gift of an enslaved mother to her daughter in antebellum Charleston, in an effort to gain special access to Black women’s cultures of care and strategies of memory keeping. The sack contained several objects, including a hand-me-down dress. By applying the trailblazing findings of the historian Stephanie M. H. Camp, we will explore the meanings of adornment, dignity, and survival.

Sponsored by the UW Department of History and the UW Libraries


The African American Intellectual History Society (AAIHS)’s Sixth Annual Conference

Tiya was a keynote speaker at The African American Intellectual History Society (AAIHS)’s Sixth Annual Conference, March 20-21, 2021. The conference theme was “The West.”


Pecan: The Intersection of Biodiversity and Human Diversity

In the 2021 Arnold Arboretum Director’s Lecture Series, three gifted writers examine the entwined histories of the pecan tree and humans. From the migrations of this quintessential American tree to its place in Indigenous culture and a searing memory of enslavement, James McWilliams, Robin Wall Kimmerer, and Tiya Miles will explore the deeper meanings of human relationships with trees.

— William (Ned) Friedman

Every Pecan Tree: Trees, Meaning, and Memory in Enslaved People’s Lives
Tiya Miles, Professor of History and Radcliffe Alumnae Professor, Harvard University and author of All That She Carried

Tiya Miles will take up the pecan tree as inspiration for exploring the meaning of trees in the lives of enslaved African Americans. Using a family heirloom passed down by Black women, as well as slave narratives, oral histories, and missionary records, her presentation will consider the importance of trees as protectors of bodies and spirits, as sites of violence, as memory keepers, and as historical witnesses in the Black experience of captivity and resistance. Ultimately, time spent with these examples will underscore the centrality of the natural world to Black, and indeed, human, survival.

This is a Zoom presentation.


Harvard & the Legacy of Slavery: Reckoning with the Past to Understand the Present

The presidential initiative on Harvard and the Legacy of Slavery, anchored at Harvard Radcliffe Institute, is an effort to understand and address the enduring legacy of slavery within our University community. Our Radcliffe on the Road series (now virtual) will explore the charge of the initiative and the work under way to explore Harvard’s historical entanglements with slavery and its legacies, along with the initiative’s efforts to support student and community engagement.

Speakers

  • Tomiko Brown-Nagin, chair of the Presidential Committee on Harvard and the Legacy of Slavery, dean of Harvard Radcliffe Institute,
  • Daniel P.S. Paul Professor of Constitutional Law at Harvard Law School, and professor of history in the Faculty of Arts and Sciences, Harvard University
  • Tiya Miles, member of the Presidential Committee on Harvard and the Legacy of Slavery, Radcliffe Alumnae Professor at Harvard Radcliffe Institute, and professor of history in the Faculty of Arts and Sciences, Harvard University
  • Martha Minow, member of the Presidential Committee on Harvard and the Legacy of Slavery, former dean of Harvard Law School, and 300th Anniversary University Professor, Harvard University

For information about Harvard Radcliffe Institute and its many public programs, visit https://www.radcliffe.harvard.edu/.


Politics and Prose: The Legacy of Literature

Watson Senior Fellow ZZ Packer hosts a panel featuring Nicole Terez Dutton, writer and editor of Kenyon Review, Tiya Miles, Professor of History and Radcliffe Alumnae Professor at the Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study at Harvard University, and author and National Book Award winner Jacqueline Woodson.

This public panel is the culmination of the Watson Institute student study group hosted by ZZ Packer, The 1619 Project: Governing Narratives. With the essays and methodology of the New York Times’ 1619 Project as a starting point, the group has been exploring how certain political, historical and sociological narratives inform an American ethos and construct an American identity—sometimes at the expense of competing narratives.

Watch the event on YouTube.


headshots of speakers at writing family event

Writing Family, Reconstructing Lives

In November 2019, Tiya Miles participated in Writing Family, Reconstructing Lives for a conversation about the past, present, and future of family history and kinship as historical methodology. This symposium featured historians who have approached family, kinship, and genealogy in innovative ways, and scholars who have engaged their own familial pasts, especially within the context of U.S. and African American history.

Moderated by Kendra Field.
Speakers included Nathan Connolly, Thulani Davis, Thavolia Glymph, Kerri Greenidge, Leslie Harris, Martha Hodes, Martha Jones, David Levering Lewis, Tiya Miles, and Dawn Peterson.

More info here.


does the west matter - panel on dais

The Future of Regionalism in American History

The 2019 Presidential Plenary featuring William Cronon, Edward L. Ayers, Lisa Brooks, Susan Lee Johnson, Tiya Miles, and George Sánchez will air on C-SPAN’s American History TV, Saturday, November 16 at 10:30 P.M. or watch online using this link.


PastForward 2019: Denver

Tiya Miles was a panelist at PastForward 2019 TrustLive: Celebrating Women’s History in Denver, Colorado, a National Trust for Historic Preservation conference to foster networking, learning, and inspiration with conversations on representation, visibility, and inclusion.

PastForward 2019: A Conference of the National Trust for Historic Preservation event poster

Watch video of the event to hear from American Indian advocate Ada Deer, historian Dr. Tiya Miles, and self-described “Southern Gothic” singer/songwriter Amythyst Kiah. View photos from the event in the slideshow below.

Tiya Miles speaks at the podium at PastForward
Tiya Miles, Ada Deer, and Amythyst Kiah sitting in chairs on stage at PastForward.
Tiya Miles, Ada Deer, and Amythyst Kiah sitting in chairs on stage at PastForward.
Panned out view of Red Rocks Amphitheatre with Tiya Miles, Ada Deer, and Amythyst Kiah sitting in chairs on stage at PastForward.
Tiya Miles
On stage
On Stage
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Watch video from PastForward 2019: Denver (November).


9th Annual Gregory Lecture

event poster with an image of Tiya Miles and a handwritten note from Ruth Middleton

Tiya Miles participated in “This Sack”: Reconstructing Enslave Women’s Lives Through Objects. on Thursday, October 24, 2019 at Seney-Stovall Chapel | 200 N Milledge Avenue | Athens, GA.
More information about the event here.


Giving Voice 2019

Tiya joined The Royall House and Slave Quarters for Giving Voice 2019 in September at An Afternoon with Historian Tiya Miles. The event was on Sunday, September 15, 2019. Learn more about the event.

The Royall House and Slave Quarters logo


Tiya Miles standing at the podium at Legacy Awards program at Politics and Prose

Appearance at Politics and Prose Bookstore

Politics and Prose Bookstore, in DC, hosted Hurston-Wright Legacy Award Honorees on Thursday, Oct. 18th, 2018.

politics and prose logo

Group photo

2018 Legacy Award Nominees Tiya Miles, Noliwe Rooks, Sheryll Cashin, Peter Kimani and Ladee Hubbard. Photo credit: Stephanie Williams


Metro-Detroit Book and Author Society’s 92nd Author Luncheon

The Metro-Detroit Book and Author Society presented its 92nd author luncheon in May 2018 at Burton Manor Banquet and Conference Center in Livonia. Tiya was an invited speaker at the event. Awards that were presented included the James C. Dance Award for the Arts and the Mary J. Ritter Literacy Award. Authors will signed books after the luncheon.


Appearance at Forever Books

In mid-April 2018, Tiya Miles made an appearance at Forever Books, located in St. Joseph, MI, to speak about and sign copies of her book The Dawn of Detroit:  The Dawn of Detroit: A Chronicle of Slavery and Freedom in the City of the Straights.


Appearance at the University of Detroit Mercy

At the University of Detroit Mercy in early April, Tiya Miles discussed and signed her latest book, The Dawn of Detroit: A Chronicle of Slavery and Freedom in the City of the Straights, which recovers the city’s early complicity in slavery. It has recently been highlighted in The Chronicle of Higher Education, the New York Times and other national publications


Appearance at the Charles H. Wright Museum of African American History

Tiya Miles with book in the background on teal blue and maroon poster

The Year of Reparations: Repairing & Rebuilding Our Global Communities

In early March 2018, author and MacArthur “Genius” Fellow, Tiya Miles, Ph.D., University of Michigan discussed her acclaimed book, The Dawn of Detroit: A Chronicle of Slavery & Freedom in the City of the Straits, at the Charles H. Wright Museum of African American History.


Appearance at Pages Bookshop

In mid-February in 2018, Tiya Miles visited Pages Bookshop on the last day of February to discuss her latest book, The Dawn of Detroit: A Chronicle of Slavery & Freedom in the City of the Straights.


Finding Common Ground

The National Museum of African American History and Culture and the National Museum of the American Indian are two national museums reframing our views of American history as more multifaceted than previously depicted. As such, how do we talk about the intersections of various peoples, the shared histories?

In February, the program, Finding Common Ground, moderated by Michel Martin, weekend host of NPR’s All Things Considered, focused on the complex, sometimes fraught, history of African Americans and Native Americans, and how these intertwined stories have become an essential part of our American identity. Speakers explored how African Americans and Native peoples have energized each other’s movements both historically and in contemporary times. Collective actions have been shaped by cooperation, conflict, accommodation, oppression, and resistance. “Finding common ground” is not always easy but it is a vital necessity in the realization of American democracy. Distinguished speakers included Lonnie Bunch, Kevin Gover (Pawnee), Tara Houska (Couchiching First Nation), Tiya Miles, and Paul Chaat Smith (Comanche). Cosponsored with the National Museum of African American History and Culture.

The First and the Forced: Tracing Historical Overlaps in Native and Black America
Tiya Miles’ presentation offers an overview of key moments of overlap in Native American and African American histories. As “the first and the forced” Americans, indigenous and African-descended people have time-traveled together, contending with forces of radical change, suffering  traumas of displacement and violence, and shaping short- and long-term survival strategies. Their histories have touched in significant ways that colored their group and individual experiences, impacted the development of the United States as a nation, and continue to influence contemporary life experiences.

This talk explored two key moments in this history of red and black overlap: slavery (the enslavement of Native people by Euro-Americans and the enslavement of black people by Euro-Americans as well as Native Americans) and schooling (the use of education to “civilize” Indians and “uplift” blacks). Exploring these key moments serves as a means of explicating the argument that Native Americans and African Americans mattered to one another—for better and for worse. And in addition, the intersectional nature of these groups’ position in American history mattered to the origins, growth, and staying power of the United States—the very nation that authorized their subjugation as racialized populations. At the center of the talk was the question: what is at stake when marginalized peoples come into contact with one another, often forming relational ties across generations in the compromising context of pain and loss?

Finding Common Ground Event Poster[Click to Enlarge]

Additional information about the event speakers [Click to Enlarge]

In March, The Smithsonian Magazine featured highlights from Tiya Miles’ panel presentation at Finding Common Ground, an event hosted by Smithsonian National Museum of African American History and Culture and Smithsonian’s National Museum of the American Indian. Tiya explains the reasoning behind Native American ownership of black slaves based on “meticulously laid out primary-source evidence” that she presented at Finding Common GroundRead “How Native American Slaveholders Complicate the Trail of Tears Narrative: The Smithsonian’s new exhibition ‘Americans’ at the National Museum of the American Indian “prompts a deeper dive for historic truths”.

“Americans” will be on view at the National Museum of the American Indian through 2022.


Leon Jett Memorial Lecture

On February 3rd, Tiya Miles participated in the Leon Jett Memorial Lecture: Native Americans and African Americans in Early Detroit: Enslavement and Resistance.

Dr. Tiya Miles, a celebrated historian, gave a paradigm-shifting talk about her research on Native American and African American slavery in the heart of the Midwest’s iconic city: Detroit. A book signing of her newly released book, The Dawn of Detroit: A Chronicle of Slavery and Freedom in the City of the Straits, will follow.


Meet the Author

Folks had an opportunity to meet Tiya Miles, Saturday, Jan. 27, at the Detroit Public Library Main Branch, where Miles discussed the book and joined a panel moderated by local historian and author Kimberly Simmons. Simmons is the executive director of the Detroit River Project, which aims to educate people about the river’s history and is lobbying for recognition for the river as a UNESCO World Heritage Site.

Aminah and Phoenix, pictured here with Tiya, attended the event with their mom

 


Clements Library Celebrates the Release of The Dawn of Detroit

On December 8th, in collaboration with the Detroit School, the Clements Library celebrated the release of The Dawn of Detroit: A Chronicle of Slavery and Freedom in the City of the Straits, by Tiya Miles. Miles, a MacArthur Foundation Fellow and Professor of American Culture, Afro-American and African Studies, History, Women’s Studies, and Native American Studies.


Detroit Dialogue: Our Hidden History

Tiya Miles participated in a facilitated dinnertime discussion titled Detroit Dialogue: Our Hidden History to explore how and why historical sites or memorials come into being, and which perspectives are omitted from mainstream historical records.


Appearances at Source Booksellers & Literati Book Stores

Tiya celebrated the launch of her new book, The Dawn of Detroit, at two independent local book stores in Michigan: Source Booksellers in Detroit and Literati in Ann Arbor. View photos of Tiya at the book launch at Source Booksellers with Janet Jones, store owner; and Stephen Ward, Professor of Afroamerican & African Studies and Director of Semester in Detroit, University of Michigan in the slideshow below.

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Tiya Miles at Source in Detroit, MI
for the book launch of The Dawn of Detroit with Janet Jones & Stephen Ward.
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TIya Miles at Source in Detroit, MI
for the book launch of The Dawn of Detoit
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Tiya Miles at Source in Detroit, MI
for the book launch of The Dawn of Detroit
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Tiya Miles signs books at the book launch of The Dawn of Detroit at Source in Detroit, MI
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Tiya’s latest book, The Dawn of Detroit, is available for purchase at Source Booksellers, Literati, and independent book stores near you.


Source Booksellers logoSOURCE BOOKSELLERS

Detroit, Michigan

LITERATI

Ann Arbor, Michigan

The Secret Life of Indigenous Archives

Flyer for the Secret Life of Indigenous Archives

Tiya Miles joined Lisa Brooks, Amy Lonetree, and Philip Round in Chicago to discuss the “secret life” of the indigenous archive: what haunts and/or comforts them as researchers, the unexpected intimacies, the unresolved questions, the wondrous discoveries, the feeling of kinship to the lives of others and the material traces they leave behind.


Tiya Miles presenting at From Tarzan to Tonto

From Tarzan to Tonto: Stereotypes as Obstacles Toward a More Perfect Union

The National Museum of the American Indian, the National Museum of African Art and NMAAHC recently presented From Tarzan to Tonto: Stereotypes as Obstacles Toward a More Perfect Union.

The discussion among noted scholars, authors and critics about the persistent presence of stereotypes and the barriers they pose toward a more enlightened and inclusive society was featured in Essence Magazine. Read the article and view photos of the event.

The entire presentation is available to stream on YouTube. Watch now. Find and view additional programming in The National Museum of the American Indian archives.

event pamphlets From Tarzan to Tonto

Event participants included Gaurav Desai, Tulane University; Adrienne Keene, Brown University; Tiya Miles, University of Michigan; Imani Perry, Princeton University; and Jessi Wente, film critic and director of film programs, TIFF Bell Lighthouse. The event took place at the American Indian Museum’s Rasmuson Theater in Washington, D.C.


Of Sea and Thunder and Spring – Earth Day Celebration 2017

Organized collaboratively by ECO Girls at the University Michigan and the BlackGirlLandProject at Michigan State University, this Earth Day gathering was designed to foster discussion about women’s ties to the natural world, with a focus on black women’s histories and literatures.

Participants shared stories of women’s perceptions of nature, uses of land, links to particular environments, and considered the application of these stories in our present political and environmental moment. Learn more about this event and Environment for Girls.

Tiya Miles with ECO Girls organizers Elizabeth James (right), Marjai Kamara, and Zakiyah Sayyed (left to right) at the Intellectual Retreat on Black Women and Environment, co-sponsored by ECO Girls and the BlackGirlLandProject, Ann Arbor MI, April 2017.

Of Sea and Thunder and Spring Earth Day 2017

ECO Girls does not currently have plans to offer programming for this academic year, 2017-2018. Their collaborations to further environmental consciousness are ongoing! Visit a new environmental education website created in part by ECO Girls faculty. Learn more about the Red Thunder Oral History Project.


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Women’s Diversity Book Group Event

From an event hosted by the Women’s Diversity Book Group, co-sponsored by Women’s Rights Information Center’s Community Outreach & Education Committee and Englewood Public Library, to celebrate Native American Heritage Month in November, Englewood, New Jersey.

Thank you to Lois Brown, a researcher on Afro-Native histories in her own right, for sharing these thoughts on the group’s discussion: “Everyone loved learning something new—about the enslavement of African Americans by American Indians (and the aftermath), and the venue of the novel was the best vehicle for them. They were happy to know that I had met you and said to tell you they enjoyed Cherokee Rose very much.”

Pictured: Rita Bantom, Johanna Bleckman, Cathy Dougharty, Joyce French, Maudine Logan, Kaye Marz, Tiya Miles, Lee Ridley, Mary Vardigan (from left to right).


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2015-2016 Author’s Forum hosted by U of M Libraries

In January 2016, Tiya Miles and Martha Jones discussed The Cherokee Rose at the University of Michigan, Hatcher Graduate Library, Ann Arbor Central Campus.


TIya Miles participates in a panel discussion

RACISM: THE LASTING LEGACY OF SLAVERY IN THE MIDWESTERN METROPOLIS

At the end of September 2016, Tiya participated in a public history forum and panel discussion presented by UC’s History Department featuring visiting scholar: Dr. Tiya Miles, University of Michigan.

TIya Miles panel discussion

Panel participants included Christine Anderson, Dept. of History, Xavier University, Holly McGee, Dept. of History, University of Cincinnati, Betty Ann Smiddy, College Hill Historical Society, and Brian Taylor, Black Lives Matter Cincinnati.

The event was moderated by Fritz Casey-Leininger, Dept. of History, University of Cincinnati and sponsored by the UC History Department, the Charles Phelps Taft Research Center, the Dean of Arts and Sciences, and the African American Cultural Resource Center.Tiya Miles laughing with panel partcipants


GOAT BONES IN THE BASEMENT: A CASE OF RACE, GENDER & HAUNTING IN OLD SAVANNAH

Tiya participated in a lecture sponsored by the Taft Research Center, Department of History, Dean’s Office of the College of Arts and Sciences, and the African American Cultural Resource Center.


University of Michigan Author’s Forum: The Cherokee Rose

Watch video from a dialogue with Tiya Miles and Martha Jones at UM Libraries

Miles’ insight into the intimate dynamics of slavery at the crossroads of Native American and African American experience has won her professional accolades and an eager readership. In this sense, while The Cherokee Rose is fiction, it is no sharp departure. Miles builds upon what she had already taught us, including her exploration of Georgia’s Chief Vann House, to provide a new vantage point from which to explain the past.

– Martha Jones