Daniel Heath Justice


Daniel Heath Justice is a Colorado-born citizen of Canada and the Cherokee Nation. He is professor of First Nations and Indigenous Studies and English at the University of British Columbia. He started his studies at University of Northern Colorado and received his M.A. and Ph.D. from the University of Nebraska–Lincoln. He began his career at the University of Toronto, where he taught English and worked in association with the Aboriginal Studies Program.
Justice is the author of Why Indigenous Literatures Matter , Our Fire Survives the Storm: A Cherokee Literary History , as well as his Indigenous fantasy trilogy, The Way of Thorn & Thunder - Kynship, Wyrwood, and Dreyd which was published by Kegedonce Press.

Awards

Why Indigenous Literatures Matter is the winner of the NAISA Award for Subsequent Book published in 2018. It also received the 2019 PROSE Award, granted by the Association of American Publishers, in the category of Literature and was nominated for the Gabrielle Roy Prize for Literary Criticism from the Association of Canadian and Quebec Literatures. In 2015, Justice was awarded the UBC Killam Research Prize in recognition of his leadership in the field of Indigenous Literary Studies and for his many contributions to it, including Our Fire Survives the Storm: A Cherokee Literary History, The Oxford Handbook of Indigenous American Literature, and Why Indigenous Literature Matters. In 2010, he was awarded the Ludwik and Estelle Jus Memorial Human Rights Prize at the University of Toronto. James Cox of the University of Texas at Austin stated that "Daniel has devoted his life and work to advocating for the civil and human rights of the silences and dispossessed peoples of our world." The University of Toronto added that Justice's "positive and lasting impact is felt directly at the U of T through his one-on-one work with native students, his ability to bring previously inexperienced young people to thinking about social justice and creative activism against oppression and his encouragement of both graduate and undergraduate students to take on community service as part of classes."

Books