Essay Contest Winners Honor 鈥淲riter as Witness鈥 Book
For more than 25 years, the Writer as Witness (WAW)听program has been a beloved part of 麻豆传媒鈥檚 first-year student experience. Each year, a common nonfiction text is chosen to engage incoming students in a reflective dialogue about important and current themes. Incoming students are invited to read the text, attend a live interview with the author, discuss the text in Writing Studies Program courses, and enter an essay contest to honor writing inspired by the text.
The text chosen for this year鈥檚 first-year students was Why Didn鈥檛 We Riot? A Black Man in Trumpland (Other Press, 2020), written by award-winning Black journalist Issac听J. Bailey. The book is described as a collection of impassioned, powerful essays that explore what it means to be Black in an America that supports former President Donald Trump. Bailey is the Laventhol Visiting Professor at the Graduate School of Journalism at Columbia University and Batten Professor at Davidson College. His work has been published in听the New York Times, Politico Magazine, Time Magazine, the Washington Post, the Charlotte Observer听and听CNN.com,听and he has appeared on NPR, CNN, and MSNBC.听
Bailey visited campus on September 6, 2023, to discuss the book at Bender Arena. 听
The Contest: Bearing Witness to Text听
The writing contest encourages students to submit original compositions inspired by the Writer as Witness book. The idea of bearing witness to a text is an important one, says Daisy Levy, senior professorial lecturer in the Department of Literature. 鈥淚t鈥檚 an idea that encourages people from all backgrounds to observe and comment on our society. This is fundamental to our intellectual community and more generally, our human one. We all see things. We all think about those things and have significant insights to offer. Expanding our understanding of what happens in the world, and even more importantly 鈥 what it means 鈥 helps us build complex bodies of knowledge. Simply, the more witness we bear, the more possibility we see 鈥 more knowledge, more questions, more complexity, connection, relationships, and difference.鈥
Contest Winners
Levy says that she received a robust stack of submissions this academic year, all of them excellent in distinct ways. 鈥淎t the award reception, I shared how heartening it is to see and hear from this next generation听as they step onto public platforms and speak their minds. All these writers are responding to big issues and questions in incisive ways. It鈥檚 a real pleasure.鈥澨
Judges are looking for works that exemplify the idea of 鈥渨riting as a witness,鈥 and that showcase the writer鈥檚 unique voice alongside voices of others. Prizes include a cash prize for the Grand Prize winner and Runners-Up Prizes of听gift cards for the AU Campus Bookstore. Prize Winners are invited to read from their works at the Awards Ceremony, and the Grand Prize winner鈥檚 piece is published in Atrium, the student magazine published by AU鈥檚 Writing Studies Program. Runners-Up winners鈥 works (and Honorable Mentions) are sent to the editors of Atrium for consideration.听
This year鈥檚 contest winner are as follows:
Grand Prize
Luke DiBonaventura for 鈥淭he Apotheosis of Lies: Judeo-Christian Morality and the Deification of Man鈥澨
Runners Up
- Aideen Scanga for 鈥淭his鈥
- Anna Sperans for 鈥淎 Stigmatized Relationship: The 鈥楶redatory鈥 Black Man and His White Female 鈥楶rey鈥欌
Honorable Mention
- Ben Ackman for 鈥淓nemies Abound: The Role of Fear in Modern Racial Politics鈥澨
- Madeline Gee for 鈥#justgirlythings: Are Taylor Swift, Barbie, and Beyonce Destroying Feminism?鈥澨
- Charlotte Strier for 鈥淭he Stigmatization of Mental Health Conditions鈥
Challenging Themes, Listening with Respect
Every year, the committee receives a wealth of submissions 鈥 spanning genres, topics, and voices. Every year, the judges are faced with the challenging task of selecting a few as exemplars. Levy points out that it鈥檚 heartening to read these essays and witness how willingly 麻豆传媒 students embrace the challenge: to look into the world, to think about what they see there, and then weave that into prose that stimulates their audience to think things in new ways.
Each year, the dialogue that develops around the challenging themes in the community text unifies students and faculty in an intellectual experience, she adds. 鈥淲hen we ask tough questions, consider what鈥檚 at stake for all involved, and listen to one another respectfully, we can develop our own positions and ideas about the world and participate in an academic community.鈥 The contest asks students to consider themselves as important commentators, 鈥渘ot just published writers, not just scholars, but our students 鈥 new generations of thinkers and writers and witnesses. This is the hallmark of our essay contest, as I see it. The world needs to hear what you have to say.鈥
Congratulations to all the participants!
For More Information and Previous Texts
For more information about the WAW Program, visit the program website. 听
The previous texts chosen for Writer as Witness are as follows:
- Conditional Citizens: On Belonging in America,听by Laila Lalami,听long listed for Andrew Carnegie Medal and named one of the best books of the year by听Time, Bookpage, NPR,听and听LA Times.听
- Eloquent Rage: A Black Feminist Discovers Her Superpower, by Brittney Cooper, named best/most anticipated book of 2018 by听The Atlantic, The Root, Politico Magazine, Glamour, and听Bustle.听
- Rising Out of Hatred: The Awakening of a Former White Nationalist, by Eli Saslow, winner of the 2019 Dayton Literary Peace Prize for Nonfiction.听
- The Sixth Extinction: An Unnatural History,听by Elizabeth Kolbert, winner of the 2015 Pulitzer Prize in the General Nonfiction Category听
- Strangers in Their Own Land: Anger and Mourning on the 麻豆传媒 Right, by Arlie Russell Hochschild, National Book Award finalist听
- We Gon' Be Alright: Notes on Race and Resegregation, by Jeff Chang, the Northern California Nonfiction Book of the Year听
- Notes from No Man's Land, by Eula Biss, winner of the Graywolf Press Nonfiction Prize and the National Book Critics Circle Award for Criticism.听
- The Good Soldiers, by David Finkel, a "Best Book of the Year" for the听New York Times, Chicago Tribune, the听Boston Globe, the听Christian Science Monitor, and others, and the winner of the Helen Bernstein Book Award for Excellence in Journalism.听
- The Devil's Highway: A True Story, by Luis Alberto Urrea, a Pulitzer Prize Finalist and winner of the Lannen Literary Award.听
- Savage Inequalities, by Jonathan Kozol, a finalist for the National Book Critics Circle Award.听