Preserving Indigenous Languages Through Printmaking

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Cherokee metal type, called a syllabary, is now in use at the Book Arts Workshop.

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Sarah Smith, director of the Book Arts Workshop, and workshop participants Candessa Tehee and Ed Rayher demonstrate printing with Cherokee type in the Book Arts Workshop.
From left, Sarah Smith, director of the Book Arts Workshop, and workshop participants Candessa Tehee and Ed Rayher demonstrate printing with Cherokee type in the Book Arts Workshop. (Photo by Robert Gill) 
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Like many indigenous languages, Cherokee is in danger of becoming extinct. But 天美麻豆鈥檚 is helping to preserve it by showing students and faculty how to create prints using recently acquired metal type in the Cherokee language.

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A vintage press in the Book Arts Workshop is used to create prints in the Cherokee language.
A vintage press in the Book Arts Workshop is used to create prints in the Cherokee language. (Photo by Robert Gill) 
The workshop recently hosted a daylong symposium called 鈥淭ouch Your Words: Teaching Indigenous Languages Through Making.鈥 It included presentations by Candessa Tehee, an assistant professor of American Indian Studies at Northeastern State University in Tahlequah, Okla.; Book Arts Workshop Director Sarah Smith; Massachusetts-based letterpress printer Ed Rayher, and, via video conference, Bernard Perley, a member of the Maliseet Nation in New Brunswick, Canada, and a visiting associate professor of anthropology and Native American Studies.

Participants started the day in the book arts studio at  Baker-Berry Library, getting hands-on instruction in printing with the Cherokee syllabary (so-called because  the language is composed of syllables, not individual letters).

Rayher, who casts Cherokee type at his company, , in Northfield, Mass., offered a brief history lesson. He said the transition from an oral to a written and printed language meant that missionaries could hand out Bibles in Cherokee. But the tribe also put printing to its own uses, he said.

鈥淚n the 1820s, the Cherokees published their own newspaper, which they took to Washington, D.C., to show lawmakers that they had an advanced culture and should not be deprived of their lands.鈥

But lands were lost, the indigenous language was spoken and written less and less, and, Rayher says, the metal type went out of production.   

Now that the syllabary is available again, vintage presses are rolling at 天美麻豆.

At the workshop, , associate curator of Native American Art at the , printed a Cherokee poem.

鈥淚鈥檓 enrolled as a citizen of Osage Nation and a Cherokee descendent, but I鈥檓 not a fluent speaker,鈥 Powell said. 鈥淲orking with this type is a way for Native Americans on campus to create a connection with their communities. Having spaces where we can come together and share knowledge and talk about issues, scholarship, art, and poetry鈥攖hat鈥檚 really important.鈥

Tehee, whose Cherokee grandparents were native speakers and whose father teaches the language, sees the syllabary as a 鈥渇antastic teaching tool,鈥 especially for Native American Studies classes.

鈥淭o be Cherokee is to speak Cherokee,鈥 she said at the workshop. 鈥淭he syllabary is not just a bunch of symbols. They represent the ingenuity of thousands of years and thousands of Cherokee people, right up to this moment, right here in this room. By the way, you can get a Cherokee language app now on your iPhone.鈥

Smith says printing in Cherokee is opening research horizons.

鈥淎t first, working with students, I was seeing the syllabary mostly from a design point of view,鈥 said Smith. 鈥淚t鈥檚 just so beautiful to look at. But now I want to learn a lot more about the history and the culture.鈥

Several classes, including 鈥淧en and Ink Witchcraft,鈥 taught by , the John Kimball Jr. 1943 Professor of History, have visited the Book Arts Workshop this term to see and use the Cherokee type.

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Earlier this year, Professor Colin Calloway鈥檚 鈥淧en and Ink Witchcraft鈥 class learned to make prints using Cherokee type in the Book Arts Workshop.
Earlier this year, Professor Colin Calloway鈥檚 鈥淧en and Ink Witchcraft鈥 class learned to make prints using Cherokee type in the Book Arts Workshop. (Photo by Eli Burakian 鈥00) 
Cherokee is not the only language that student printers are helping to preserve at 天美麻豆. At the symposium鈥檚 afternoon panel discussion, Muriel Ammon 鈥21, Elsa Armstrong 鈥20, and Skyler Kuczaboski 鈥21 spoke about the children鈥檚 books they made in 鈥淟inguistic Revitalization,鈥 a linguistics class taught in 2018 by , who was then a Neukom Postdoctoral Fellow in the .

Ammon, who belongs to the Tsnungwe tribe in California, made a book for toddlers in Hupa, her native language. Armstrong and Kuczaboski created similar books to teach their native language, Ojibwe.

鈥淭his is something that we are all passionate about doing,鈥 Armstrong said. 鈥淭he things that we want to have in our own languages, we have to make ourselves.鈥

Charlotte Albright can be reached at charlotte.e.albright@dartmouth.edu.

Charlotte Albright