Indigenous Open Mic Night
Event description
- Arts and entertainment
- Campus life
- Free
- Open to the public
Join the Labriola National American Indian Data Center on Thursday, February 26 from 6 to 8 p.m. for this semester's Indigenous Open Mic Night! The host for this Open Mic is Dr. Manny Loley.
Dr. Manny Loley is 'Áshįįhi born for Tó Baazhní'ázhí; his maternal grandparents are the Tódích'íi'nii and his paternal grandparents are the Kinyaa'áanii. He holds a Ph.D. in English and Literary Arts from the University of Denver, and an M.F.A. in Creative Writing-Fiction from the Institute of American Indian Arts. Dr. Loley is an inaugural Indigenous Nations Poets Fellow, a founding member of Saad Bee Hózhǫ́: Diné Writers' Collective, and the editor for Leading the Way: Wisdom of the Navajo People. Since 2018, he has served as director of the Emerging Diné Writers' Institute. His work has found homes in Poetry Magazine, Pleiades Magazine, the Massachusetts Review, the Santa Fe Literary Review, Broadsided Press, the Arkansas International, The Gift of Animals, Nihikéyah: Navajo Homeland, and the Diné Reader: an Anthology of Navajo Literature, among others. His writing has been thrice nominated for Pushcart Prizes. Dr. Loley is at work on a novel titled They Collect Rain in Their Palms. He is from Tsétah Tó Ák'olí on the Navajo Nation.
This Open Mic is a part of a series Manny Loley is leading throughout February called, "Seeds of Language, Seeds of Stories."