Jennifer Nez Denetdale | |
Birth Place: | United States |
Occupation: | Professor of American studies, University of New Mexico |
Language: | English, Navajo |
Alma Mater: | Ph.D. in History, Northern Arizona University, 1999 |
Relatives: | Great-great-great grandparents, Manuelito and Juanita [1] |
Jennifer Nez Denetdale is a professor of American studies at the University of New Mexico, where she teaches courses in Native American Studies with an emphasis on race, class, and gender.[2] She is the director of the University of New Mexico's Institute for American Research.[3] She also specializes in Navajo history and culture and the effects of colonization and decolonization as it has impacted the Navajo people.[4] She is the chair of the Navajo Nation Human Rights Commission. Denetdale is also an advocate for students who wish to pursue an education in Indigenous studies, Navajo women, and the LGBTQ+ community.
Denetdale's parents had both attended Stewart Indian School, a boarding school in Carson City, Nevada. Denetdale was raised in Tohatchi, New Mexico from childhood with her three sisters and one brother. Her four clans are the Zia (or Weaver) Clan, and she was born for the Salt People Clan. Her maternal grandfathers are of the Red House clan and her paternal grandfathers are of the Water-Running-Together Clan.[5]
Denetdale cites her former professor Luci Tapahonso and Louis Owens as her early mentors in her pursuit of higher education.
Denetdale earned her M.A. in English from Northern Arizona University (NAU). She later earned her doctorates in history from NAU in 1999.[6] [7] Denetdale is the first person of Diné / Navajo descent to earn a Ph.D in History.
In 2015 Denetdale was chosen to deliver an inaugural address for the 23rd Navajo Nation Council.