Arizona Humanities Announces 2017 Humanities Awards

Congratulations to James Blasingame, Barbara Hatch, and Nancy Liliana Godoy-Powell

Phoenix, AZ – Arizona Humanities is delighted to announce the recipients of the 2017 Arizona Humanities Awards. The recipients of this year’s Humanities Awards are:

• James Blasingame, Dan Shilling Humanities Public Scholar Award

• Barbara Hatch, Juliana Yoder Friend of the Humanities Award

• Nancy Liliana Godoy-Powell, Humanities Rising Star Award

For over 20 years the Arizona Humanities Awards have recognized community members and organizations that have made significant contributions to Arizona’s civic and cultural life through the humanities. Brenda Thomson, Executive of Director for Arizona Humanities shared, “This year’s award winners are outstanding. The winners are as diverse as the communities they serve, and the programs they have created. The awards were quite competitive this year, with 21 talented nominations. It was tough to choose amongst so many incredible scholars, leaders and humanitarians. We are very fortunate to have such talented individuals and remarkable organizations here in Arizona.”

Read more about each award recipient below. Save-the-date for the Arizona Humanities Awards to be presented on Friday, February 24, 2017 at New City PHX (1300 N. Central Avenue, Phoenix, AZ 85004). Information about the event and tickets for the general public will be announced soon. Learn more at www.azhumanities.org or call 602-257-0335.

HUMANITIES PUBLIC SCHOLAR – DAN SHILLING AWARD

James Blasingame, Professor, Department of English, College of Liberal Arts and Sciences at Arizona State University
James Blasingame
As a professor at Arizona State University, Jim Blasingame focuses on young adult literature, Indigenous curriculum, censorship, secondary reading and writing pedagogy, preparing pre-service teachers, and cowboy poetry. He also works with the ASU chapter of the US State Department’s International Leaders in Education Partnership, for which he helps visiting teachers from around the world to create professional development modules to use with teachers in their home countries. Dr. Blasingame is the executive director of the Assembly on Literature for Adolescents of the National Council of Teachers of English, and has served as its president and co-editor of The ALAN Review, a journal devoted entirely to young adult literature. For fourteen years, he created the Books for Adolescents
pages of the Journal of Adult and Adolescent Literacy, which is sponsored by the International
Literacy Association. He is an assistant to Simon Ortiz on the RED INK Indigenous Initiative for
All: Collaboration and Creativity at Work.

Dr. Blasingame is the author of Books That Don’t Bore ‘Em: Young Adult Literature for Today’s
Generation (Scholastic, 2007), Gary Paulsen: A Student Companion to Young Adult
Literature (Greenwood Press 2007), and They Rhymed with Their Boots On: A Teacher’s
Guide to Cowboy Poetry (The Writing Conference, 2000). He is a coauthor of John Green:
Teen Whisperer (Rowman and Littlefield, 2015, with Laura Brown and Kathleen Deakin),
Stephenie Meyer, In the Twilight (Rowman and Littlefield, 2012, with Kathleen Deakin and
Laura Brown), Using Mentor Texts to Teach Writing (Scholastic, 2010,with Ruth Culham and
Ray Coutu) Teaching Writing in Middle and Secondary Schools (Pearson, Prentice-Hall 2004,
with John Bushman) and Literature for Today’s Young Adults (Pearson, 2012, with Alleen
Pace Nilsen, Don Nilsen, and Ken Donelson. He has also published over 100 interviews with
poets and authors of young adult literature and over 200 book reviews in VOYA, Journal of
Adolescent and Adult Literacy, The ALAN Review and English Journal. Dr. Blasingame works
with Dr. Alleen Pace Nilsen and Dr. Don Nilsen to create the annual Honor List of young adult
literature for English Journal. His articles on young adult literature and censorship have
appeared in the Washington Post online, and his coauthored (with Dr. Sybil Durand) piece on
censorship, entitled “Do No Harm,” won the 2016 ALAN Review Editors Award “for excellence
in writing and contribution to the field.”

Dr. Blasingame was the 2014 ASU Doctoral Mentor of the Year, and the 2008 ASU Parents’
Association Professor of the Year. He was the 2008 International Reading Association
Arbuthnot Award winner for outstanding professor of children’s and young adult literature.
2014 ASU Doctoral Mentor of the Year. He has given presentations performing cowboy poetry
at the National Council of Teachers of English convention, the International Reading
Association, the Western States Conference on Rhetoric and Composition, and the Graz
University International Summer School at Seggau Castle in Austria.

Before coming to ASU in 2000, Dr. Blasingame spent twenty-four years in secondary
education as a high school teacher and principal.

Humanities Public Scholar Nominees: Albrecht Classen, Betsy Fahlman, Alison King,
Melanie Sturgeon, Michelle Tellez

FRIEND OF THE HUMANITIES – JULIANA YODER AWARD

Barbara Hatch, Founder and Program Director, Veterans Heritage Project

Barbara HatchBarbara Hatch, Veterans Heritage Project (VHP) Founder and Program Director, is a retired
high school history teacher with 40 years of experience, a B.A. in English and Education, and a M.A. in History. Hatch began bringing veterans into her classroom in 1998, established the
after-school oral history program as a club in 2004, and worked with parents to expand the program into other schools by transitioning VHP into a 501(c)3 non-profit in 2009. Hatch volunteers full-time to organize student participation in hundreds of community service events statewide; speaks on behalf of VHP at educational conferences and to civic groups; provides Teacher Advisor training and guidance to 25 Arizona chapters; works with chapters to publish five regional editions of the Since You Asked volume; and provides training to volunteer veteran speakers for the lecture series.

For her role in developing the VHP curriculum, Hatch has been recognized as the 2011 recipient of the Daughter’s of the American Revolution Founders Medal for Education; 2012 Arizona History Teacher of the Year; 2015 Wilbur Murra Lifetime Achievement Award
recipient from the Arizona Council for the Social Studies; and a 2016 Hon Kachina Volunteer Award winner.

Friend of the Humanities Nominees: Bullion Plaza Cultural Center and Museum (Thomas
Foster), Lisa Falk, Susan French, Andrea Houchard, Latino Familia Initiative, Morning Star
Leaders (Debbie Manuel), Karen O’Keefe, Opera Guild of Southern Arizona, Marge Pellegrino,
Sedona Public Library, University of Arizona Humanities Seminar Program

HUMANITIES RISING STAR AWARD

Nancy Liliana Godoy-Powell, Archivist and Librarian of the Chicano/a Research
Collection at Arizona State University

Nancy Liliana Godoy Powell

Nancy Liliana Godoy-Powell is the Archivist and Librarian of the Chicano/a Research Collection at Arizona State University. She’s responsible for collection development, archival arrangement-description, community outreach – exhibits, and instruction-specialized reference services. Godoy-Powell, a native of Yuma, comes from a farm worker background and is committed to engaging, educating, and empowering her communities. She received her B.A. in History at Northern Arizona University and M.A. in Library Science at University of
Arizona. As a Knowledge River alumna, she’s a passionate advocate for underserved communities in libraries and archives, more specifically the Latino community. In 2015,
Godoy-Powell also helped co-establish the Arizona LGBT History Project, an initiative to preserve local history and make archival material accessible to future generations.

Humanities Rising Star Nominees: Megan LaRose, Katherine Standefer