From March 9 to 12, 2026, the BERKELEY Center for New Media (BCNM)
will be hosting our NATIVE SEAS SERIES, a week-long educational
program curated by Sophia Perez, Indigenous Technologies coordinator
and UC BERKELEY PhD, and presented in collaboration with the Critical
Pacific Islands Studies Collective (CPISC) and the Pacific Islander
(PI) Initiative, that will bring several TRADITIONAL NAVIGATORS,
including students and relatives of Papa Mau Piailug, from the
Northern Mariana Islands to the Bay Area. These distinguished
navigation teachers will be traveling from across the Pacific,
representing the only two remaining schools of TRADITIONAL PACIFIC
NAVIGATION AND CARRYING FORWARD ANCIENT KNOWLEDGE SYSTEMS THAT HAVE
GUIDED OCEANIC TRAVEL FOR CENTURIES WITHOUT MODERN INSTRUMENTS. As
teachers, their work is foundational to keeping the ancient art of
TRADITIONAL NAVIGATION ALIVE, and they will be VISITING UC BERKELEY TO
FOSTER INTELLECTUAL EXCHANGE AND CREATE VISIBILITY FOR PACIFIC
ISLANDER AND INDIGENOUS COMMUNITIES.
Planned public events include:
THE ANCIENT ART OF VOYAGING: A NIGHT WITH TRADITIONAL MASTER
NAVIGATORS OF MICRONESIA
MONDAY, MARCH 9, AT 7PM - CALIFORNIA ACADEMY OF SCIENCE'S MORRISON
PLANETARIUM, SAN FRANCISCO
Experience a glimpse into the realm of traditional master navigators
of Micronesia, as they humbly share stories of stars, voyages,
navigation, and the enduring quest to keep their ancient knowledge,
practices, and legacy alive. Witness CalAcademy’s Morrison
Planetarium transformed into an immersive celestial map, as the
presenters share traditional seafaring methods, star and constellation
identification, and Indigenous scientific knowledge systems, offering
a rare opportunity to learn about the Pacific region outside of a
colonial perspective.
KEYNOTE LECTURE WITH TRADITIONAL NAVIGATORS
WEDNESDAY, MARCH 11, AT 5PM - GRIMES ENGINEERING CENTER'S JARVIS
AUDITORIUM, BERKELEY
Bridging history, arts, and oceanic wisdom, the navigators visit the
UC Berkeley campus to share their experiences as representatives of
the only remaining schools of traditional Pacific navigation. Join us
as they present their ancient knowledge systems and cosmology, share
incredible firsthand accounts of seafaring voyages, and discuss their
collective efforts to preserve their cultural heritage.
TRADITIONAL BOAT-MAKING WORKSHOP
THURSDAY, MARCH 12, AT 1PM - WATERSIDE WORKSHOPS' BERKELEY BOATHOUSE,
BERKELEY
Join us at Waterside Workshops' Berkeley Boathouse as we unveil two
five-foot model canoes commissioned especially for this weeklong
celebration: one constructed using traditional methods and materials,
and one with 3-D printed thermoplastics! The two expert makers of the
canoes will present their techniques, dive into the rich and enduring
history of Carolinian and Chamorro boat-building, and explore what
Indigenous and new technologies can learn from one another.
-
Pacific Studies scholar Dr. Damon Salesa observed that, prior to
Western contact, not one of the over 1,000 Pacific Island languages
contained a word for “the Pacific”— this was because, to
Indigenous Pacific Islanders, "the Pacific" was not a place. Each
island culture created and belonged to their own, distinct reaches of
the Pacific, defined in part by their voyaging traditions and
techniques. Salesa calls these lived oceanic regions “Native
Seas,” which “blanketed the inhabited Pacific, like an intricate
weave of maritime places, constantly being made and unmade, with
Islanders holding all of it together with warp- and weft-like
voyages.”
By embracing Salesa’s PI-centered Native Seas framework, this
workshop series intends to explore and celebrate the perseverance of
ancient seafaring knowledge in our modern era, where oceanic worlds
are sustained not only through traditional voyaging, but also through
new technologies spanning from airplanes to planetariums.
A special week-long series of events, presented as part of BCNM's
Indigenous Technologies program, New Media & Oceans program, and Art,
Technology, and Culture Colloquium, supported by the Chancellor's
Advisory Committee for Student Services (CACSS), co-sponsored by the
Arts Research Center (ARC), the Townsend Center for the Humanities,
the Department of History, the Asian American and Pacific Islander
Transpacific Futures Initiative, and in collaboration with the
Critical Pacific Islands Studies Collective (CPISC) and the Pacific
Islander (PI) Initiative
About Indigenous Technologies
Indigenous Technologies is a program of BCNM that engages questions of
technology and new media in relation to global structures of
indigeneity, settler colonialism, and genocide in the 21st century.
Our Indigenous Tech events and ongoing conversations with Indigenous
scholars and communities aim to critically envision and reimagine what
a more just and sustainable technological future can look like. We
highlight Indigenous engagements with robotics, computer science,
telecommunications, artificial intelligence, virtual reality, social
media, online activism, video games, and more.
Accessibility
BCNM events are free and open to the public. These events will be held
in-person, on and off the UC Berkeley campus. We strive to meet all
access and accommodation needs. Please contact info.bcnm [at]
berkeley.edu with requests or questions.
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18/02/2026 Last update