In 1997-1998, the graduate students in the History Department organized what was to be the first of an annual graduate essay competition. The Hisham Sharabi Graduate Student Essay Competition is named in honor of the late Dr. Hisham Sharabi who taught undergraduate and trained graduate students at Georgetown for over 40 years. The Competition recognizes excellence in graduate writing with a small cash prize.
Papers submitted for the Award must have been completed as part of course requirements at Georgetown. Original research papers, historiographical reviews, and interpretive essays covering a wide range of regions and time periods, make up the diverse pool of entries. The entries are judged by a committee consisting of department faculty and a graduate student.
First Prize: Megan Faller, Masculinity in Crisis? Rethinking the Muse in Vienna, 1900
Honorable Mention: Okezi Otovo, Population Reform and Proletarian Babies: The Infant Hygiene Movement in Bahia, Brazil, in the Old Republic
Honorable Mention: Christina Petrides, Slavery on the Black Sea: A Survey of Interconnections
First Prize: Ben Fulwider, An All-powerful Economic Weapon: Roads, Rails, and State Formation in Postrevolutionary Mexico, 1940-1950
Second Prize: Melissa Byrnes, Frenchmen or Foreigners? The Decolonization of Discourse on North African Immigration, 1961-1972
Third Prize: Vanesa Casanova-Fernández, Images of Europe and Africa in the Modern Spanish Imaginary: the Genesis and Evolution of Spanish Africanism 1859-1911
No prizes awarded
First Prize: Chris Morrison, Searching for Answers and Identity: The Creation of American Colonial Policy for the Philippines in an Age of Imperialism, 1898-1905
Second Prize: Aaron Palmer, Our Lives, Our Fortunes, Our Sacred Honor: Imperialist and Colonial Identity Among Governing Elites in South Carolina, Maryland, Barbados and Jamaica, 1763-1783
Third Prize (tie): Henri Lauzière, ‘Abd al-Salam Yasin in Moroccan Perspective: The Articulation of a Post-Salafi Islamism
Nadya Sbaiti, The Discourse On and Of Muta‘ in Contemporary Lebanon
First Prize: Jeff Zalar, The Index of Forbidden Books and Catholic Nationalism in Wilhelmine Germany
Second Prize: Catherine Blair, We Ourselves Have Seen Him and Served with Him': A Look at the Participants in the Pugachev Rebellion
Third Prize: Alex Merrow, All for the Truth, All for the Church': Catholic Historiography in Nineteenth-Century Germany
First Prize: Simone Ameskamp, Chosen Peoples and Promised Lands - Nationalism and Religion
Second Prize: Sean Foley, Statesmen, Taxes, and Visions: The Rise of the Mahdi in the Sudan, 1881-1885
Third Prize: Not awarded
First Prize: Sara Scalenghe, The Court Records of Tripoli as a Source for the History of Women and Gender in the Ottoman Empire
Second Prize: John McGinn, See No Evil, Hear No Evil: NATO Policy during the Prague Spring
Third Prize (tie): Kathryn Coughlin, Virginity in Islamic Juridical and Popular Discoruse: A Diachronic Examination
Gregory Spira, 'El Ingreso Secreto': Viceregal Entry Ceremonies and the Consolidation of Legitimate Government in (title incomplete)
First Prize: Jeffrey Taffet, My Guitar Is Not for the Rich: The New Chilean Song Movement and the Politics of Culture
Second Prize: Sherry Föhr (Lehr), Continuity Without Manipulation: Junkers and Peasants in Imperial Germany
Third Prize: Natana DeLong-Bas, Crisis in the Haramayn: Religious Legitimacy or Practical Statesmanship? The Muwahhidun Conquest and the Ottoman Recovery of Mecca and Medina
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