Tim Frandy

Any
Assistant Professor, Central, Eastern, and Northern European

About

Tim Frandy is a Sámi- and Finnish-American born and raised on Anishinaabe Aki in northernmost Wisconsin on the south shore of Gitchi-Gami, Lake Superior, amidst the region’s thousands of lakes and deep forests of pine, birch, maple, and balsam. Growing up in close relation with the woods and waters, the seasons and weather, the plants and animals have guided Frandy’s work, in exploring how ecological worldview differs between settler and Indigenous communities—and the profound ways that these differences matter in securing a better future for us all.


Tim Frandy

Any
Assistant Professor, Central, Eastern, and Northern European

About

Tim Frandy is a Sámi- and Finnish-American born and raised on Anishinaabe Aki in northernmost Wisconsin on the south shore of Gitchi-Gami, Lake Superior, amidst the region’s thousands of lakes and deep forests of pine, birch, maple, and balsam. Growing up in close relation with the woods and waters, the seasons and weather, the plants and animals have guided Frandy’s work, in exploring how ecological worldview differs between settler and Indigenous communities—and the profound ways that these differences matter in securing a better future for us all.


Tim Frandy

Any
Assistant Professor, Central, Eastern, and Northern European
About keyboard_arrow_down

Tim Frandy is a Sámi- and Finnish-American born and raised on Anishinaabe Aki in northernmost Wisconsin on the south shore of Gitchi-Gami, Lake Superior, amidst the region’s thousands of lakes and deep forests of pine, birch, maple, and balsam. Growing up in close relation with the woods and waters, the seasons and weather, the plants and animals have guided Frandy’s work, in exploring how ecological worldview differs between settler and Indigenous communities—and the profound ways that these differences matter in securing a better future for us all.