Beyond the Flag

Madeline Meyer

Beyond the Flag brings you conversations with design students and Indigenous leaders who are part of the Community Design Studio, College of Art and Design's year-long effort to support a legislative initiative to reconsider the seal, motto, and flag of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts. Our work to inform the legislative commission, engage public spaces throughout Massachusetts, encourages outcomes that reconcile the symbols of a hurtful colonial past with the cultural, political, environmental, and social priorities of Native and non-Native communities today.

Episodes

  1. Understanding Tribal Sovereignty with Councilman Jonathan James Perry

    11/20/2022

    Understanding Tribal Sovereignty with Councilman Jonathan James Perry

    Lesley Art + Design’s Community Design Studio invites you to a conversation with Councilman Jonathan James Perry about the larger implications of the Massachusetts state flag, seal, and motto. Jonathan James Perry is an Aquinnah Wampanoag culture bearer, leader, historian, artist, and professional speaker. He is grounded in the traditions of his ocean-going ancestors. His material work embodies the refined quality of that of his ancestors, while still drawing upon his experience in a contemporary society. He is currently serving his fifth, three-year term as Councilman for the Wampanoag Tribe of Gay Head / Aquinnah, and works diligently to enforce and uphold the sovereignty of his tribal nation as well as to maintain cultural continuance among his tribal citizens. He has over fifteen years of experience working within the Tribal Historic Preservation Office, with the responsibility of protecting and preserving cultural sites of significance throughout southern New England. He currently works for the Elders Council at the Mashantucket Pequot Tribal Nation to ensure cultural continuity and preservation within the community. He has over twenty years of experience in the research and historical interpretation of Eastern Woodlands Native culture and art. He has worked with various non-profit and tribal organizations in exhibit design and cultural consultation based on traditional Wampanoag knowledge, symbolism, and values.  Councilman James Perry was most recently awarded the 2017 First People’s Fund Jennifer Easton Community Spirit Award for his work in reviving Wampanoag maritime traditions. Recorded on April 20, 2021.

    45 min
  2. Understanding the Massachusetts State Flag with Jean-Luc Pierite

    05/12/2021

    Understanding the Massachusetts State Flag with Jean-Luc Pierite

    Lesley Art + Design’s Community Design Studio invites you to a conversation with Jean-Luc Pierite and co-hosts Madeline Meyer and Jess Stevens about the Massachusetts state flag, seal, and motto. This introductory discussion also explores themes of education, mascots, and what it really means to have a seat at the table. To familiarize yourself with the Massachusetts state flag, this graphic from Change the Mass Flag is a great place to start: https://tinyurl.com/mass-flag Originally from New Orleans, Louisiana, Jean-Luc now resides in Jamaica Plain. Prior to his election to the North American Indian Center of Boston Board of Directors, Jean-Luc was also elected to the Community Linguist seat of the Advisory Circle for CoLang for the period 2016-20. The Institute on Collaborative Language Research or "CoLang" is designed to provide an opportunity for community language activists and linguists to receive training in community-based language documentation and revitalization. Currently, Jean-Luc volunteers with his Tribe's Language and Culture Revitalization Program which is a collaboration with Tulane University in New Orleans. This program is based on tradition passed from Jean-Luc's great-grandfather Joseph Alcide Pierite, Sr., last traditional chief and medicine man of the Tunica-Biloxi. The Tribe is an amalgamation of members from the Central Louisiana communities of: Tunica, Biloxi-Choctaw, Ofo, and Avoyel. Jean-Luc is currently a student in the Master in Design for Emergent Futures at the Institut d'Arquitectura Avançada de Catalunya. Jean-Luc has a B.A. in Humanities with a co-major in Mass Communication and Japanese from Dillard University in New Orleans. He also earned an A.S. in Video Game Design from Full Sail University in Orlando, Florida. Recorded on February 2, 2021. Learn more about NAICOB at: http://www.naicob.org/ https://www.instagram.com/naicob91/ https://twitter.com/naicob91 https://www.facebook.com/NAICOB Jean-Luc Pierite’s project site: https://indigifab.org/

    24 min

About

Beyond the Flag brings you conversations with design students and Indigenous leaders who are part of the Community Design Studio, College of Art and Design's year-long effort to support a legislative initiative to reconsider the seal, motto, and flag of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts. Our work to inform the legislative commission, engage public spaces throughout Massachusetts, encourages outcomes that reconcile the symbols of a hurtful colonial past with the cultural, political, environmental, and social priorities of Native and non-Native communities today.