Rose Mary Crawshay Prize

The Rose Mary Crawshay Prize is a literary prize for female scholars, inaugurated in 1888 by the British Academy.

Description

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Suffragist Rose Mary Crawshay in the 1870s from the Peoples Collection of Wales

The prize, set up in 1888, is said by the British Academy to be the only UK literary prize specifically for female scholars.[1] Two prizes can be awarded in any year, each "to a woman of any nationality who, in the judgement of the Council of the British Academy, has written or published within three years next preceding the year of the award an historical or critical work of sufficient value on any subject connected with English Literature, preference being given to a work regarding one of the poets Byron, Shelley and Keats".[2] The prize is now "only" £500, but it provides a valuable recognition for non-fiction women writers. It has been awarded since 1916 by the British Academy.[3]

The prize was established by Rose Mary Crawshay as the Byron, Shelley, Keats in Memoriam Prize Fund.[4]

Winners

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Winners of the award have been:[5]

Year Winner Book ISBN
1916 Charlotte Carmichael Stopes Shakespeare's Environment
1917 Leonie Villard Jane Austen: Sa Vie et Son Oeuvre
M. Stawell Shelley's Triumph of Life (published in Vol. 5 of Essays and Studies by members of the English Association)
1918 Grace Dulais Davies Historical Fiction of the Eighteenth Century
1919 Mary Paton Ramsay Les Doctrines Medievales Chez Donne
1920 Jessie L. Weston From Ritual to Romance
1921 Mary Ethel Seaton A Study of the Relations between England and the Scandinavian Countries in the Seventeenth Century Based upon the Evidence of Acquaintance in English writers with Scandinavian Literatures and Myths
1922 Edith Clara Batho James Hogg, the Ettrick Shepherd
1923 Joyce M. S. Tompkins A study of the Work of Mrs Radcliffe
1924 Madeleine L. Cazamian Le Roman et les Idees en Angleterre- Influence de la Science, 1860–1890
1925 No Award
1926 E. R. Dodds (Miss A. E. Powell) The Romantic Theory of Poetry: an Examination in the light of Croce's Aesthetic
1927 Alice Galimberti L'Aedo d'Italia: Algernon Charles Swinburne (R. Sandron, 1925)
1928 Enid Welsford The Court Masque: A Study in the Relationship between Poetry and the Revels (Cambridge, 1927)
1929 Hope Emily Allen The Writings Ascribed to Richard Rolle, Hermit of Hampole, and Materials for his Biography (Modern Language Association of America, 1927)
1930 Una Ellis-Fermor For her work on Christopher Marlowe and her edition of Marlowe's Tamburlaine
1931 Janet G. Scott Les Sonnets Elisabethains (Champion, Paris, 1929)
1932 Helen Darbishire The Manuscript of Paradise Lost, Book 1 (Clarendon Press, 1931)
1933 Eleanore Boswell The Restoration Court Stage, 1660–1702 (Harvard University Press, 1932)
1934 Giovanna Foà Lord Byron, Poeta e Carbonaro (unpublished)
1935 Hildegard Schumann The Romantic Elements in John Keats' Writings
1936 Caroline Spurgeon Shakespeare's Imagery
1937 Frances A. Yates John Florio (Cambridge University Press, 1934)
1938 Dorothy Hewlett (Mrs Kilgour) Adonais
1939 No Award
1940 Mary Lascelles (M. M. Lascelles) Jane Austen and Her Art (Clarendon Press, 1939)
1941 Julia Power Shelley in America in the Nineteenth Century (University of Nebraska)
1942 Sybil Rosenfeld Strolling Players and Drama in the Provinces, 1660–1765 (Cambridge University Press)
1943 Kathleen Mary Tillotson Edition of the Poems of Michael Drayton
1944 Katherine Balderston Thraliana (Clarendon Press, 1942)
1945 Rae Blanchard The Correspondence of Richard Steele (Oxford University Press, 1941)
1946 No Award
1947 Marjorie Hope Nicolson Newton Demands the Muse: Newton's "Opticks" and the Eighteenth Century Poets (Princeton University Press)[6]
1948 No Award
1949 Rosemond Tuve Elizabethan and Metaphysical Imagery
1950 Helen Darbishire For her Clark Lectures and collaboration in an edition Wordsworth's Poetical Works
1951 Rosemary Freeman For her work on Emblem Books
1952 Mary Ethel Seaton Abraham Fraunce's Arcadian Rhetorike
1953 Helen Gardner Divine Poems of John Donne
1954 Alice Walker Textual Problems of the First Folio
1955 Evelyn M. Simpson The Sermons of John Donne
1956 Helen Estabrook Sandison Poems of Sir Arthur Gorges
1957 J. E. Norton Gibbon's Letters
1958 Mary Moorman Biography of Wordsworth The Early Years
1959 Kathleen Coburn Notebooks of S.T. Coleridge, Vol. I., 1794–1804
1960 Joyce Hemlow Biography of Fanny Burney
1961 Vittoria Sanna Sir Thomas Browne's "Religio Medici"
1962 Barbara Hardy The Novels of George Elliot
1963 Joan Bennett Sir Thomas Browne: His Life and Achievement
1964 Aileen Ward John Keats: The Making of a Poet
1965 Madeline House The Letters of Charles Dickens
1966 Margaret Crum Poems of Henry King
1967 Enid Welsford Salisbury Plain, a Study in the Development of Wordsworth's Mind and Art
1968 Winifred Gérin Charlotte Brontë: the Evolution of Genius ISBN 978-0-19-881152-7
1969 Alethea Hayter Opium and the Romantic Imagination
1970 Barbara Rooke Coleridge's "The Friend"
1971 No Award
1972 Valerie Eliot For her edition of the facsimile of the original drafts of The Waste Land
1973 Marilyn Butler Maria Edgeworth: A literary Biography
Christina Colvin Maria Edgeworth: Letters from England 1813–1844
1974 Jean Robertson Her edition of Sir Philip Sidney's Old Arcadia
1975 Doris Langley Moore Lord Byron – Accounts Rendered
1976 Hilary Spurling Ivy When Young: The Early Life of Ivy Compton-Burnett 1884–1919[7]
1977 Harriet Hawkins Poetic Freedom and Poetic Truth
1978 Lyndall Gordon Eliot's Early Years
1979 Elisabeth Murray Caught in the Web of Words
Joan Rees Shakespeare and the Story
1980 Helen Gardner The composition of the Four Quartets
1981 Helen Peters Her edition of Donne's Paradoxes and Problems
1982 Mary Lascelles The Story-Teller Retrieves the Past: Historical Fiction and Fictitious History in the Art of Scott, Stevenson, Kipling and some others
Annabelle Terhune Her edition of Edward Fitzgerald's Complete Letters
1983 Claire Lamont Her edition of Scott's Waverley
1984 Christine Alexander The Early Writings of Charlotte Brontë[8] ISBN 0-631-12991-X
Gillian Beer Darwin's Plots: Evolutionary Narrative in Darwin, George Eliot and Nineteenth-Century Fiction[9]
1985 Penelope Fitzgerald Charlotte Mew and her Friends
Anthea Hume Edmund Spenser: Protestant Poet
1986 Margaret Doody The Daring Muse: Augustan Poetry Reconsidered
Ann Saddlemyer The Collected Letters of John Millington Synge
1987 Rosemary Cowler The Prose Works of Alexander Pope
Iona Opie (with the late Peter Opie) The Singing Game
1988 Jane Millgate Scott's Last Edition: A Study in Publishing History
Kathleen Tillotson The Letters of Charles Dickens
1989 Valerie Eliot The Letters of T.S. Eliot 1888–1922
Margaret Smith Her edition of Charlotte Brontë's The Professor
1990 Kathleen Coburn Notebooks of Samuel Taylor Coleridge, ed. 4th Vol.
Norma Dalrymple-Champneys Complete Poetical Works of George Crabbe, ed. 3 Vols
1991 Anne Barton The Names of Comedy
Valerie Rumbold Women's Place in Pope's World
1992 Antonia Forster Book Reviews in England, 1749–1774
1993 Barbara Rosenbaum Index of Literary Manuscripts, Volume IV, part 2: Hardy to Lamb
Margaret Reynolds Her critical edition of Elizabeth Barrett Browning's Aurora Leigh
1994 Margaret Cardwell Her volume in the Clarendon edition of Great Expectations (CUP, 1993)
Janet Gezari Charlotte Brontë and Defensive Conduct (Pennsylvania University Press, 1992)
1995 Caroline Franklin Byron's Heroines (CUP, 1993)[10]
Jenny Uglow Elizabeth Gaskell: A Habit of Stories (Faber & Faber, 1993)
1996 Kate Flint The Woman Reader 1837-1914 ISBN 978-0-19-812185-5
Ruth Smith Handel's Oratorios and Eighteenth Century Thought ISBN 978-0-521-02370-2
1997 Hermione Lee Virginia Woolf (biography)[11] ISBN 978-0-375-70136-8
1998 Moyra Haslett Byron's Don Juan and the Don Juan Legend ISBN 978-0-19-818432-4
Katie Trumpener Bardic Nationalism: The Romantic Novel and the British Empire ISBN 978-0-691-04480-4
1999 Elizabet(h) Wright Psychoanalytic Criticism. A Reappraisal[2] ISBN 978-0-415-92145-9
Karen O'Brien Narratives of Enlightenment. Cosmopolitan History from Voltaire to Gibbon ISBN 9780521619448
2000 Marina Warner No Go the Bogeyman: Scaring, Lulling and Making Mock[1] ISBN 978-0-374-22301-4
Joanne Wilkes Lord Byron and Madame de Staël: Born for Opposition[1] ISBN 978-1-84014-699-8
2001 Annette Peach Portraits of Byron[2]
Lucy Newlyn Reading, Writing, and Romanticism: The Anxiety of Reception[2] ISBN 978-0-19-818711-0
2002 Wendy Doniger The Bedtrick: Tales of Sex and Masquerade[2] ISBN 978-0-226-15643-9
Kate Flint The Victorians and the Visual Imagination[2] ISBN 978-0-521-08952-4
2003 Jane Stabler Byron, Poetics and History[12] ISBN 978-0-521-81241-2
Claire Tomalin Samuel Pepys: The Unequalled Self[2] ISBN 978-0-375-72553-1
2004 Maud Ellmann Elizabeth Bowen: The Shadow Across the Page[2] ISBN 978-0-7486-1703-6
Anne Stott Hannah More: The First Victorian[2] ISBN 978-0-19-927488-8
2005 Claire Preston Thomas Browne and the Writing of Early Modern Science[13] ISBN 978-0-521-83794-1
Judith Farr with Louise Carter The Gardens of Emily Dickinson[2] ISBN 978-0-674-01829-7
2006 Rosalind Ballaster Fabulous Orients: Fictions of the East in England 1662-1785[2] ISBN 978-0-19-923429-5
2007 Susan Oliver Scott, Byron and the Politics of Cultural Encounter[14]
2008 Helen Small The Long Life[15] ISBN 978-0-19-922993-2
2009 Frances Wilson The Ballad of Dorothy Wordsworth[16] ISBN 978-0-571-23047-1
Molly Mahood The Poet as Botanist ISBN 978-0-521-86236-3
2010 Daisy Hay Young Romantics[17] ISBN 0-7475-8627-6
2011 Fiona Stafford Local Attachments: The Province of Poetry[18] ISBN 0-19-955816-7
2012 Julie Sanders The Cultural Geography of Early Modern Drama 1620-1650[19] ISBN 1-107-00334-2
2014 Hannah Sullivan The Work of Revision[20] ISBN 0-674-07312-6
2015 Catherine Bates Masculinity and the Hunt: Wyatt to Spenser[21] ISBN 978-0199657117
Ankhi Mukherjee What is a Classic? Postcolonial Rewriting and Invention of the Canon[21] ISBN 9780804785211
2016 Lyndsey Stonebridge The Judicial Imagination: Writing after Nuremberg[21] ISBN 978-0748642359
2017 Kate Bennett John Aubrey: Brief Lives with an Apparatus for the Lives of our English Mathematical Writers[22] ISBN 978-0199689538
2018 Emma J. Clery Eighteen Hundred and Eleven: Poetry, Protest and Economic Crisis[23] ISBN 978-1107189225
2019 Marina MacKay Ian Watt: the Novel and Wartime Critic[24] ISBN 978-0198824992
2020 Marion Turner Chaucer: A European Life[25] ISBN 978-0691160092
2021 Helen Moore Amadis in English, a Study in the Reading of Romance[26] ISBN 978-0198832423
Gillian Russell The Ephemeral Eighteenth Century: Print, Sociability, and the Cultures of Collecting[26] ISBN 978-1108487580
2022 Erica McAlpine The Poet's Mistake[27] ISBN 9780691203478
2023 Noémie Ndiaye Scripts of Blackness: Early Modern Performance Culture and the Making of Race ISBN 9781512822632
Claire Pettit Serial Forms: The Unfinished Project of Modernity, 1815-1848 ISBN 9780198830429

See also

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References

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  1. ^ a b c "Winners of academic book prize for women writers". 7 July 1999. Retrieved 4 January 2009. The winners of the UK's only book prize for female scholars... Set up in 1888, the annual Rose Mary Crawshay Prize celebrates outstanding published works by women on any subject concerned with English literature.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k British Academy. "Rose Mary Crawshay prizes". Archived from the original on 17 September 2008. Retrieved 4 January 2009.
  3. ^ Mosalski, Ruth (6 February 2018). "The legacy left behind by three Welsh suffragists". walesonline. Retrieved 26 November 2018.
  4. ^ "Medals and Prizes". British Academy. Retrieved 4 January 2009. In 1888 Mrs Rose Mary Crawshay established the Byron, Shelley, Keats in Memoriam Prize fund. After her death, administration of the fund was transferred to the Academy. Two prizes are now normally awarded each year to women who have published recently an historical or critical work of sufficient value on any subject concerned with English literature. [dead link]
  5. ^ The Rose Mary Crawshay Prize. British Academy via Internet Archive. Retrieved 24 September 2018.
  6. ^ Rousseau, G.S. (1982). "Eloge: Marjorie Hope Nicolson, 18 February 1894-9 March 1981". Isis. 73 (1): 98. doi:10.1086/352915.
  7. ^ "Hilary Spurling". British Council. Archived from the original on 9 October 2009. Retrieved 11 January 2010.
  8. ^ "Christine Alexander". University of New South Wales. Retrieved 21 January 2010.
  9. ^ "Gillian Beer". British Council. Archived from the original on 9 October 2009. Retrieved 11 January 2010.
  10. ^ "Professor Caroline Franklin". Swansea University. Archived from the original on 3 July 2009. Retrieved 11 January 2010.
  11. ^ "Hermione Lee". her acclaimed biography of Virginia Woolf won the 1997 British Academy's Rose Mary Crawshay Prize for English Literature.
  12. ^ "Dr Jane Stabler wins Rose Mary Crawshay Prize". University of Dundee. Archived from the original on 3 July 2004. Retrieved 4 January 2004. The book uses new archival research into Byron's correspondence and reading to trace the complexities of his work. Dr. Stabler argues that from his early satires to Don Juan, Byron's poetics developed in response to his reception by the English reading public.
  13. ^ "Recent Winner of the 2005 British Academy Crawshay Prize". University of Leeds. Archived from the original on 3 August 2012. Retrieved 4 January 2009. Dr. Preston pays due and discriminating attention to the way Browne writes, and those characteristics of his prose that make him so strikingly individual and memorable in a period (after all) of other great prose writers.
  14. ^ "2007: Dr Susan Oliver". British Academy. Archived from the original on 17 September 2008. Retrieved 4 January 2009. Her prize-winning book, her first monograph, entitled Scott, Byron and the Politics of Cultural Encounter, published by Palgrave, is an innovative, scholarly and adventurous piece of literary history and cultural analysis.
  15. ^ "2008: Dr Helen W Small, Fellow and Tutor in English, Pembroke College, Oxford". British Academy. Archived from the original on 17 September 2008. Helen Small's subject in The Long Life is formidable: old age, or dying at the right time, 'being old and full of days'. Such a death enables one to die when old but not miserable, correctly mourned by a numerous and prosperous family.
  16. ^ "Rose Mary Crawshay Prizes Recent Winners". British Academy. Archived from the original on 17 September 2008. Retrieved 11 January 2010.
  17. ^ "BRITISH ACADEMY UNVEILS PRESIDENT'S MEDAL". British Academy. 25 November 2010. Archived from the original on 28 April 2011. Retrieved 26 January 2013.
  18. ^ "Rose Mary Crawshay Prize 2011". British Academy. Retrieved 26 January 2013.
  19. ^ "British Academy honor for Nottingham scholar". EurekAlert. 2 August 2012.
  20. ^ "Dr Hannah Sullivan is awarded the Rose Mary Crawshay Prize". New College. Retrieved 1 September 2014.
  21. ^ a b c "Rose Mary Crawshay Prize". British Academy. Retrieved 14 March 2017.
  22. ^ "Prize and medal winners 2017". The British Academy. Retrieved 15 October 2017.
  23. ^ "Award-winning journalists, prehistorians and world-leading economists honoured with prestigious British Academy prizes and medals", The British Academy, 20 August 2018. Retrieved 2 October 2018.
  24. ^ "Professor Marina Mackay wins prestigious Rose Mary Crawshay Prize". Faculty of English, Oxford University. 25 September 2019. Retrieved 22 March 2021.
  25. ^ "Marion Turner wins the Rose Mary Crawshay Prize". The Oxford Research Centre in the Humanities. 10 August 2020. Retrieved 22 March 2021.
  26. ^ a b "Leading slavery scholar wins prestigious British Academy prize for contributions to humanities and social sciences". The British Academy. Retrieved 2 September 2021.
  27. ^ "Dr Hannah Sullivan is awarded the Rose Mary Crawshay Prize". University of Oxford Faculty of English. Retrieved 18 March 2024.
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