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With Governor’s Award, Ivanoff recognized as leader among Alaska Native writers

Laureli Ivanoff at home in Unalakleet. (Photo by Zoe Grueskin/KNOM)

Alaska Native writers with work widely published and read by many are not very common nowadays.

However, one published writer from the Norton Sound region will receive a Governor’s Arts and Humanities Award from the State of Alaska.

an award from the State of Alaska. She hopes she will inspire more Alaska Natives to share their words with others.

She has had less time to write after giving birth of her son almost seven months ago, but Laureli Ivanoff of Unalakleet continues to reach wide-ranging audiences with her writing.

 

Ivanoff’s most recent piece, “The Bearded Seal My Son May Never Hunt,” was published in The New York Times.

For Ivanoff, this honor was surprising, humbling and even a little awkward.

“In our communities and where we live, we are taught by example to be humble and not to bring attention to ourselves," she said. "So, to receive this award — and it’s a Governor’s award — it’s a little uncomfortable for me.”

This isn't the first time Ivanoff’s writing has put her in the spotlight. She was previously nominated for a Governor’s Arts and Humanities Award.

The Unalakleet resident sees a nice change of pace with writings from an Alaska Native being recognized.

“Honestly, it’s just really refreshing, and I think it speaks to the current trend where our country and our state are moving in a way where indigenous voices are being listened to and people of color are… you know, we have a voice and we have a presence, and we are not backing down.”

Ivanoff is one of nine award recipients selected from a large group of public nominees by the Alaska Humanities Forum, the Alaska State Council on the Arts, the Alaska Arts and Culture Foundation, and the Office of the Governor.

The award committee’s statement mentions that Ivanoff’s stories are written from and about her home in Unalakleet, which provides a sense of place and connection. Her work “strengthens communities by illustrating a side of rural Alaska too rarely seen in mainstream media.”

Ivanoff’s piece “Why Can’t Media Portray the Rural Alaska I Know,” is one of many articles she has published in the Anchorage Daily News (formerly the Alaska Dispatch) that speaks further to this point.

Ivanoff says she hopes her award will inspire other Alaska Natives and indigenous people to be writers, too.

“I feel like, often times, I’m the only Alaska Native writer at this point," she said. "There’s not a lot being published by Alaska Natives, so I just hope that more voices come to the forefront, more people study journalism, and more get into the media — because the way our communities are portrayed is very important.”

As Ivanoff puts it, who better to share stories about Alaska Native communities than those who grew up and lived there. Her advice to those aspiring young writers from rural Alaska is this: “If you’re a young person in high school or college and you really enjoy writing, that’s your own spirit telling you what your gift is to this world. Recognize it, cultivate it, and you’ll do great things.”

The Governor’s Awards Ceremony is scheduled for February 7 at the Juneau Arts & Culture Center.