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The Mary Zirin Prize for Outstanding Scholarship
Elena Ivanovna Trofimova
In a field of very strong candidates her application
stood out. She has persevered under difficult conditions
in making visible the work of women writers. Beginning in
the 1980s she sponsored women's literary evenings in Moscow. Since
1991 Trofimova has taken a leading role in the work of the women's
club Preobrazhenie and soon after became part of the editorial
collective of the feminist almanac Preobrazhenie. In
1997 she became the chief editor of the almanac. Her list
of talks and publications is extensive and impressive, including
a number of entries in the Dictionary of Russian Women Writers
and 500 Russian Writers of the Twentieth Century as well
as many articles on women's literature, feminism and the work
of individual Russian women writers. Among her many projects
is a joint endeavor with Freiburg University in Germany to create
a library of Russian women's literature. We commend Elena
Ivanovna's extensive record of accomplishments in women's literature,
feminism and history in awarding her the Zirin Prize.
Kazimiera Janina Cottam
We honor Jean Cottam's long record of scholarship
in the field of women's history, especially women's military history. We
were impressed by the scope of Jean's work and by the fact that
she published not only her own research but also the writings
of other women whose work would otherwise have been unknown.
Jean Cottam has faced discrimination in receiving
academic awards and in obtaining an academic position. Nevertheless
she has played a pioneering role in the field of Soviet/Russian
women's military history, self published four books on women in
the airwar on the eastern front, as well as memoirs of women soldiers
and partisans. She has contributed entries to the Biographical
Dictionary of Military Women Worldwide, and published many
articles about women in the military. We commend Jean Cottam's
contribution as an independent scholar to the field of Russian/Soviet
women's history in awarding her the Zirin Prize.
Best Book in Slavic Women's Studies
Christine D. Tomei, ed. Russian Women
Writers (Garland, 1999).
Russian Women Writers is a major achievement. This
two-volume study includes biographical information and translations
of works by seventy-one Russian women writers beginning with Catherine
the Great to the present day. Over seventy scholars contributed
to the information found in these pages, making this work a truly
collaborative effort. Christine Tomei and her contributors
are to be congratulated for all their efforts. This work
should stand as a valuable reference for anyone interested in
Russian literary life and the history of Russian women.
Best Book by a Woman in Slavic Studies
Katherine Verdery. The Political Lives of
Dead Bodies: Reburial and Post-socialist Change (Columbia
University Press, 1999).
Katherine Verdery has written an imaginative and
engaging book on the afterlife of dead bodies in postsocialist
Europe. Through her careful analysis of just a few of the
reburials which have taken place since the collapse of communism,
we can clearly see how "dead bodies animate the study of
politics." Gracefully combining anthropology and political
theory, Verdery argues for a new understanding of political life,
one that takes into account symbolism, life experiences, and morality. This
"enchanted" view of politics provides a much richer
and deeper understanding of cultural complexity.
Best Article in Slavic Women's Studies
Padraic Kenney, "The Gender of Resistance
in Communist Poland," American Historical Review,
(April 1999): 399-425.
Padraic Kenney has written a pathbreaking article
on the role of gender under communism. While he acknowledges
that the dramatic confrontation between the state and male workers
in socialist Poland were important, Kenney explores the ways in
which a materialist consumer discourse articulated by women workers
undermined the communist regime and ultimately led to the fall
of the regime. Kenney argues quite persuasively for the central
role of gender in shaping communist Eastern Europe. This
article serves as a model for how the study of gender can enrich
our understanding of history.
Best Translation in Slavic Women's Studies
Celia Hawkesworth, trans., The Culture
of Lies, authored by Dubravka Ugresic (Pennsylvania State
University Press, 1998).
Celia Hawkesworth has produced a translation of
great power and beauty. The Culture of Lies written
by Dubravka Ugresic, a modern-day Croatian Cassandra, chronicles
the destruction of the Yugoslav cultural milieu and the creation
of a modern Croatian literary culture. Hawkesworth manages
to take these subtle, highly sophisticated essays and make them
at once natural sounding, impressively rich and intellectual,
and fundamentally foreign. This is an important, timely,
and moving book, and a superb translation.
Graduate Essay Prize
Dr. Heather Coleman (University of Illinois
at Urbana-Champaign)
The Graduate Essay Prize has been awarded to Dr.
Heather Coleman for chapter two of her dissertation, "The
Most Dangerous Sect: Baptists in Tsarist and Soviet Russia, 1905-1929,"
which was defended in July 1998 at the University of Illinois
at Urbana-Champaign. Dr. Coleman's prize-winning essay, "Becoming
a Russian Baptist: Conversion Narratives and Personal Experience,"
is a well-written and perceptive analysis of individuals who became
Baptists at the turn of the century through the early 1920s. Shtundism
has been ignored by historians, although it is continually referred
to in revolutionary writings, religious journals, and studies
of nationality movements.
Coleman is the first to take the issue had on and
explore the reasons why Shtundism was "the fastest growing
non-Orthodox religious movement among Russians in the early twentieth
century." Using archival resources and periodical literature,
she moves from a case study of a conversion experience to a broader
base of converts to Baptism and reconstructs the religious encounters
of religious migrants to the cities. Converts to Baptism
did not become revolutionaries, but Coleman shows us that their
conversion experience was as transformative as the changes in
identity that new revolutionaries have described. The Baptists'
faith "was a deeply personal choice, helping them navigate
the problems of dissent, of order and disorder, of modernization
and westernization, and of national and social identity in their
changing society."
Currently Dr. Coleman holds the position of Assistant
Professor in the Department of History at the University of Calgary.
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