Awards
Dance Collection Danse Hall of Fame Inductee
From the DCD Website:
Karen Pheasant-Neganigwane
Karen Pheasant-Neganigwane is an Anishinaabe of the Three Fires Confederacy (Ojibway, Odawa & Pottawatomi). She is a dancer, scholar, writer, artist, and orator from Wiikwemikoong, Manitoulin Island, Ontario. The daughter of residential school survivors, Karen’s path to activism and scholarly work started as a youth during the height of the civil rights era of the 1970s. The social project of Rochdale College (Toronto) provided the embryonic opening for her inquisitive spirit. Shortly after an engaging ceremony with a great Indigenous philosopher and scholar, Dr. Joe Couture, in the early 1980s, she left Toronto. She has spent the past 40 years being mentored by iconic Indigenous scholars from the Great Lakes of her people to Treaty Three, Treaty Six, and currently in Treaty Seven. Her Western education includes a B.A. in Political Science and English Literature, and graduate studies in Educational Policy Studies from the University of Alberta. She is completing a PhD in Educational Policy Studies/Indigenous Peoples Education with the University of Alberta. Karen is an Assistant Professor at Mount Royal University in the Treaty Seven region in the Department of General Education, Office of Teaching and Learning, and the Department of Humanities–Indigenous Studies. A life-long powwow dancer, Karen is the author of the award-winning book Powwow: A Celebration Through Song and Dance, which takes readers on a journey through powwow’s history and today’s thriving powwow culture.
Photo of Karen Pheasant-Neganigwane by Liliana Reyes
CCBC Norma Fleck Award for Canadian Children's Non-Fiction | 2021 | Winner
The Norma Fleck Award for Canadian Children's Non-Fiction is a lucrative literary award founded in May 1999 by the Fleck Family Foundation and the Canadian Children's Book Centre, and presented to the year's best non-fiction book for a youth audience. Each year's winner receives CDN$10,000.
JLG Gold Standard Selection | 2020 | Commended
CCBC Best Books for Kids & Teens | 2020 | Commended
Chicago Public Library Best of the Best | 2020 | Commended
OLA Best Bets Top Ten | 2020 | Commended
Forest of Reading Yellow Cedar Award | 2021 | Short-listed
Information Book Award - Honour Book | 2021 | Runner-up
Indigenous Voices Award, Creative Nonfiction and Life-Writing | 2021 | Short-listed
Rocky Mountain Book Award | 2022 | Short-listed
Notable Social Studies Trade Book | 2021 | Commended
First Nation Communities READ YA/Adult Award | 2021 | Long-listed