Monday, August 26, 2013

UNM Department of English hosts N. Scott Momaday for fourth annual Rudolfo and Patricia Anaya Lecture on the Literature of the Southwest

On Thursday, September 26, the UNM Department of English will host the distinguished writer N. Scott Momaday as the featured speaker for the fourth annual Rudolfo and Patricia Anaya Lecture on the Literature of the Southwest. Momaday will speak at 7:00 p.m. in the Grand Ballroom of the UNM Student Union Building (SUB). The lecture is free and open to the public, with a reception to follow.

N. Scott Momaday is one of the most distinguished writers of our time. His first novel House Made of Dawn was awarded the Pulitzer Prize in 1969, an event that brought new visibility to American Indian literature and literature of the Southwest, a landscape that has inflected his fiction, poetry, and paintings for decades. Born in Oklahoma of Kiowa ancestry, he lived throughout the Southwest as a child as his parents taught at Indian schools on Navajo, Apache, and Pueblo lands. He earned a B.A. from the University of New Mexico in 1958 and then taught for a year at the Jicarilla Apache Reservation before moving to Stanford University, where he earned a Ph.D. in 1963.

Momaday’s writing celebrates the power of language and the richness of oral tradition in works that invoke historical memory and often exceed the boundaries of genre. As Momaday explains: “Language fascinates me. Words are endlessly mysterious to me. And I think by and large that’s good. A writer should have that sense of wonder in the presence of words.” He has published more than 15 volumes of fiction, poetry, and drama, including The Way to Rainy Mountain (1969), The Names (1976), The Ancient Child (1989), In the Presence of the Sun (1992), The Man Made of Words (1997), and Again the Far Morning: New and Selected Poems (2011). An accomplished painter in watercolor, he often illustrates his own texts.

N. Scott Momaday has taught at the University of Arizona, Stanford University, the University of California-Berkeley, and the University of California-Santa Barbara, and has been an invited speaker at dozens of universities and colleges across the globe, including the University of Moscow. In 1992 he received the first Lifetime Achievement Award from the Native Writers’ Circle of the Americas, and in 2007 he was awarded the National Medal of Arts. His honors also include a Guggenheim Fellowship, the Academy of American Poets prize, and the Premio Letterario Internationale “Mondello,” Italy’s highest literary award. He was a founding Trustee of the National Museum of the American Indian, served as Poet Laureate of the Oklahoma Centennial in 2007, and is a member of the Kiowa Gourd Dance Society.

The UNM English Department established the annual lecture series on the literature of the Southwest in 2010 through a gift from the renowned fiction writer Rudolfo Anaya and his late wife Patricia Anaya. The English Department cherishes the fact that Emeritus Professor Rudy Anaya was on our faculty for so many years. A founder of our distinguished Creative Writing Program, he still inspires us with his joyous approach to life, sense of humor, and eloquent articulation of Hispanic culture and the beauties of the Southwest. He has long been an internationally known man of letters, but we take pride in the fact that he began his career in our department,” says Professor Gail Houston. “We feel privileged to have received his generous donation. There is no better venue for celebrating Southwest literature than the University of New Mexico English Department. We look forward to sharing this free event with everyone at UNM and in the community.” 

The annual Rudolfo and Patricia Anaya Lecture on the Literature of the Southwest features foundational figures such as Acoma Pueblo poet Simon Ortiz (2010), Las Cruces writer and playwright Denise Chávez (2011), and Taos writer John Nichols (2012). UNM Co-sponsors for the event include the Center for Southwest Research, the Center for the Southwest, the Department of English Language and Literature, the Department of History, the Honors College, and the Institute for American Indian Research (IFAIR). For further information, contact the Anaya Lecture Committee at anayalecture@unm.edu or the UNM English Department at (505) 277-6347.

Wednesday, July 10, 2013

2013 Bilinski Foundation Fellowship Recipients

Three PhD students in the English department have received Bilinski Fellowships.

Dan Cryer

Dan Cryer is a PhD student in Rhetoric and Writing in the Department of English. His dissertation follows the social activism of the early twentieth century conservationist Aldo Leopold, arguing that Leopold attempted to extend the rights of citizenship to the natural world and to act as its voice in the Democratic process. Dan served for two years as Assistant Director of UNM’s Core Writing program, was the grad student administrator for the College of Arts & Sciences’ Writing Intensive Learning Communities pilot project, and has worked extensively with UNM’s Writing Across Communities initiative. He was an online course designer at the office of New Media and Extended Learning, and has taught courses in composition and technical and professional writing.

Colleen Dunn

Colleen Dunn is a fifth-year Ph.D. candidate in English at the University of New Mexico. Her dissertation, which focuses on the lives of saints produced in Anglo-Saxon England, is driven by a central concern: the choice made by Old English hagiographers writing about female virgin martyrs to forgo (and thereby silence) native Anglo-Saxon women martyred during the Viking attacks, in favor of foreign subjects. Focusing particularly on the adapted lives of St. Juliana of Nicomedia and St. Margaret of Antioch, her research will explore what these cultural productions reveal about early medieval understandings of female sanctity, and further, the far-reaching implications these understandings had for an Anglo-Saxon audience.

Douglas Ryan VanBenthuysen

Douglas Ryan VanBenthuysen is a PhD candidate in the University of New Mexico Department of English Language and Literature, with a focus on Medieval Studies. His dissertation focuses on the concept of authority in the Old English Genesis poem(s), particularly Genesis A, an Anglo-Saxon poem based on the biblical book of Genesis. The dissertation examines both the poet's use of language and connections to Anglo-Saxon culture. Doug's other scholarly interests include Old English Language and Old Norse Language and Literature. In addition to his scholarly pursuits, Doug enjoys spending time with his ten year old son, Mauricio.

Please see the below page for details:
http://www.unm.edu/~artsci/for-students/fellowships/recipients/2013.html

Thursday, June 20, 2013

Luci Tapahonso Featured on New Mexico PBS Series ¡COLORES!

Navajo Poet Lau­re­ate and Uni­ver­sity of New Mex­ico Eng­lish Pro­fes­sor Luci Tapa­honso shares how her poetry hon­ors words on last week’s episode of ¡COLORES! New Mex­ico PBS’ weekly arts and cul­ture series. “Things that a per­son says, that a per­son lit­er­ally utters, is a sacred thing,” Tapa­honso said. This episode of ¡COLORES! was broadcast on Fri­day, June 14 at 9 p.m.

Jana Giles receives Professorship at University of Louisiana-Monroe

Alum Jana Giles has recently applied for and received the University of Louisiana-Monroe McKneeley Professorship in English Literature for 2013-16. It provides $5,400 for three years from the university foundation to support her research.

Tuesday, June 11, 2013

Tony Hillerman Portal Preview Event in Zimmerman Library

On Friday, June 14th at 5:30 pm University Libraries will host a preview event for the Tony Hillerman Portal ­– ehillerman.unm.edu – in the Willard Room in Zimmerman Library. The demonstration of the portal will be followed by a reception. The event is free and open to all.
 
In 2005, Tony Hillerman donated his manuscripts, papers and notes to Zimmerman Library. It was immediately clear that they represented a treasure trove of unique historical anecdotes and an insightful roadmap into his creative process. Given Tony's stature as an icon of New Mexican culture, combined with the exhaustive nature of his collection of papers, it is clear that there existed an amazing opportunity to make them available for research, education and public enjoyment.
Recent advances in interactive technology offer exciting ways that we can make Tony's papers available electronically. Using hyperlinked text, digital images, audio and video, making his work come alive in ways never before thought possible. Users of this resource will be able to:
  • Read Tony's manuscripts online, and view them in his own handwriting
  • Learn about Tony's life and career
  • View interviews with Tony, and experience New Mexico and the Southwest through his eyes
  • See Tony's notes and idea books, and learn how he worked and developed his literary ideas
  • Learn about New Mexico life, history and culture
His entire collection will be available to Hillerman enthusiasts, students and scholars world-wide through a unique website. The project goals are to: 
  • Digitize Tony's manuscripts, papers, and idea notebooks (digitization alone will ensure the long term preservation of Tony's work)
  • Collect and digitize photos, videos and documents about Tony's life and career
  • Create electronic links in the digital manuscripts to references Tony made to New Mexico people, events and places.
  • Design and build a web portal where internet users can go to view Tony's manuscripts and historical information about his life.
This is the first phase of the three-year project.This project will help further education in the Humanities, provide researchers an extensive new resource with which to investigate Tony Hillerman’s life and works, and help secure his legacy for future generations.

Thursday, June 6, 2013

Rudolfo Anaya's new novel: The Old Man's Love Story (Chicana and Chicano Visions of the Americas series)

To add to the kudos, Rudy Anaya also completed his new novel, The Old Man's Love Story (Chicana and Chicano Visions of the Americas series).
“There was an old man who dwelt in the land of New Mexico, and he lost his wife.” From that opening line, this tender novella is at once universal and deeply personal. The nameless narrator, a writer, shares his most intimate thoughts about his wife, their life together, and her death. But just as death is inseparable from life, his wife seems still to be with him. Her memory and words permeate his days. In The Old Man’s Love Story, master storyteller Rudolfo Anaya crafts the tale of a lifelong love that ultimately transcends death." http://www.amazon.com/dp/0806143576

Rudy Anaya honored for his new children's book, How Hollyhocks Came to New Mexico

Once again emeritus Professor Rudy Anaya is being showered with awards for his new children's book, HOW HOLLYHOCKS CAME TO NEW MEXICO.

Winner, Children's Fiction, National Federation of Press Women, 2013

First Place, Children's Fiction, New Mexico Press Women, 2013

Pablita Velarde Award For Outstanding Children's Book, Historical Society of New Mexico, 2013

Silver Finalist, Cover Design, Children's/Young Adult, Ben Franklin Book Awards, 2013

Finalist, Children's Picture Book, Hardcover Fiction, 2013 International Book Awards

Finalist, Best Interior Design, International Book Awards, 2013

Silver Medal Children's Illustrated Book (Grades 3-6), Nautilus Book Awards, 2013

Finalist, Best Latino Focused Children’s Picture Book, International Latino Book Awards, 2013

Runner Up Children's Picture Book, Great Southwest Book Festival, 2013

Honorable Mention Children's Picture Book, Los Angeles Book Festival, 2013

Honorable Mention Children's Picture Book, New England Book Festival, 2013

Honorable Mention Children's Picture Book, Paris Book Festival, 2013

Honorable Mention Children's Picture Book, San Francisco Book Festival, 2013