Jeff Berglund, an assistant professor in the Department of English, has been awarded a $5,000 summer stipend from the National Endowment for the Humanities to work on his new book, Remembering the Long Walk to Hwééldi: Diné (Navajo) Memorial Histories.
His book will contrast the different ways the 1864-1868 period of Diné (Navajo) imprisonment at Hwééldi (Fort Sumner, N.M.) has been memorialized. The award will support Berglund’s research examining how Diné cultural interests are represented differently by native and non-native perspectives in various forms of art and writing.
“Public memorials are an important part of out national healing process,” Berglund said. “As our national culture recovers from traumatic events, ways to remember them take both figurative and literal forms. My project will highlight the multiple ways—personal, social, public, creative and expressionistic—American histories are recorded and are made urgent and relevant again.”
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Berglund, a faculty member at NAU since 1999, said he is “elated, validated and inspired to get to work.”
Berglund teaches a range of classes at NAU, including contemporary literature, U.S. literature, Southwest literature, American Indian literature and multi-ethnic literature.
He is a new affiliate faculty in NAU’s Applied Indigenous Studies; an affiliate faculty and steering committee member in Ethnic Studies; the vice chair of the University Liberal Studies Committee and a board member of the Northern Arizona Book Festival. He regularly presents at the national meetings of the Modern Language Association, Navajo Studies Association and the Native American Literature Symposium.
His publishing history includes: Cannibal Fictions: American Explorations of Colonialism, Race, Gender, and Sexuality (Wisconsin, 2006); articles in Studies in American Indian Literature, American Indian Quarterly, Camera Obscura,Studies in American Fiction and Discourse. He is currently co-editing a collection of critical essays on native author Sherman Alexie. He is an alumni of Ohio State University, Washington University, St. Louis University and Creighton University.