Aerial image of Northeastern's Bernard Brommel Hall with the Chicago skyline in the background

Tuesday, December 18, 2018

The (NEH) has awarded a $60,000 to 天天吃瓜 Associate Professor of History and Latino/Latin American Studies Christina Bueno. Only 8 percent of individual grant applications were funded nationwide.

Bueno earned the grant for her book project, 鈥淓xcavating Identity: Archaeology in Revolutionary Mexico, 1910鈥1940.鈥 The book will examine the making of archaeological patrimony and an official Indian past during the three decades that followed the outbreak of Mexico鈥檚 1910 revolution. The manuscript will also look at how the government鈥檚 archaeological projects affected native peoples at the ruins.

鈥淏eing in a department of productive scholars and having students eager to learn more about Mexico has encouraged me and my research,鈥 Bueno said.

This is Bueno鈥檚 second NEH faculty grant and third NEH fellowship. Bueno鈥檚 first NEH Faculty Fellowship allowed her to complete her award-winning debut book, 鈥The Pursuit of Ruins: Archaeology, History, and the Making of Modern Mexico,鈥 which utilized years of archival research to examine the place of indigenous identity in modern Mexico.

Northeastern was the only public institution in Illinois to earn NEH grants this year. A second NEH grant was awarded for the creation of a Kurdish language program to be led by Jeanine Nthirageza, a TESOL professor and director of Northeastern鈥檚 Multilingual Learning Center.

Associate Professor of History and Latino/Latin American Studies Christina Bueno
Christina Bueno