John
Brinckerhoff Jackson Prize
Deadline:
31 December, yearly
The
Jackson Prize was established to encourage and reward American geographers
who write books about the United States which convey the insights of professional
geography in language that is interesting and attractive to a lay audience.
The prize, which carries an award of $1,000 to the author, is administered
by the Association of American Geographers.
Eligibility:
J.B. Jackson and his friends established the prize to recognize American
geographers who write serious but popular books about the human geography
of the contemporary United States. The prize is restricted to books written
by geographers, with preference given to those by U.S. citizens or permanent
residents. Textbooks, dissertations, and articles are ineligible. Special
consideration will be given to books that are carefully designed, appropriately
illustrated, and physically appealing. The Selection Committee reserves
the right to make no award in a particular year. Awards are announced
in conjunction with the Annual Meeting of the Association of American
Geographers.
Submissions::Publishers are invited to submit entries for the Jackson
Prize competition (authors may not submit their book directly and should
consult their publishers, with whom the decision to submit rests).
Publishers should forward one copy of the published book before December
31, to each of the four committee members:
- Karl B. Raitz, (chair), Department of Geography, University of Kentucky, Lexington, KY 40506–0027;
- Richard Francaviglia, Center for Southwest Studies, Box 19497–Central Library, University of Texas at Arlington, Arlington, TX 76019–0497;
- Susan Hardwick, Department of Geography, University of Oregon, Eugene, OR 97403–1251; and
- James Shortridge, Department of Geography, 209 Lindley Hall, University of Kansas, Lawrence, KS 66045.
Inquiries: For more information about the Jackson Prize, contact Karl B. Raitz, (chair), at gegraitz@email.uky.edu.
Concerning the Jackson Prize:
J. B. Jackson founded the magazine Landscape in 1951 and remained its
owner and editor until 1968. After he retired as Editor he spent more
than a decade writing about landscape and teaching celebrated courses
in the history of vernacular landscapes at Berkeley and Harvard. The Jackson
Prize of the AAG is dedicated to encouraging the kind of thinking and
writing to which J. B. Jackson devoted much of his life: to encourage
Americans to look thoughtfully at the human geography of their own country;
to try to understand how that geography came to be and what it signifies;
and to convey that understanding to the public at large.
Previous Winners
of the J. B. Jackson Prize:
2008
Blake Gumprecht for The American College Town. Amherst: University of Massachusetts Press.
2007
Eric D. Olmanson for The Future City on the Inland Sea: A History of Imaginative Geographies. Ohio University Press.
2006
Arthur J. Krim for Route 66: Iconography of an American Highway. George Thompson Publishers.
2005
Craig Colten for An Unnatural Metropolis: Wresting New Orleans from
Nature. Louisiana State University Press.
2004
Donald W. Meinig for Global America, 1915-2000. volume four of
The Shaping of America: A Geographical Perspective on 500 Years of
History. Yale University Press.
2003
Peirce F. Lewis for New Orleans: The Making of an Urban Landscape.
Center for American Places in association with University of Virginia
Press.
2002
Daniel D. Arreola for Tejano South Texas: A Mexican American Cultural
Province. University of Texas Press.
2001
John A. Jakle for City Lights: Illuminating the American Night.
Johns Hopkins University Press.
2000
David B. Lowenthal for George Perkins Marsh: Prophet of Conservation.
University of Washington Press.
1999
Blake Gumprecht for The Los Angeles River: Its Life, Death, and Possible
Rebirth. Johns Hopkins University Press.
1998
Charles S. Aiken for The Cotton Plantation South Since the Civil War.
Johns Hopkins University Press.
1997
Kenneth E. Foote for Shadowed Ground: America's Landscapes of Violence
and Tragedy. University of Texas Press.
1996
Richard Francaviglia for Main Street Revisited: Time, Space, and Image-Building
in Small Town America. University of Iowa Press.
1995
David J. Wishart for An Unspeakable Sadness: The Dispossession of
the Nebraska Indians. University of Nebraska Press.
1994
Paul Groth for Living Downtown: The History of Residential Hotels
in The United States. University of California Press.
1993
John B. Wright for Rocky Mountain Divide: Selling and Saving the West.
University of Texas Press.
1992
Wilbur Zelinsky for Cultural Geography of the United States (Revised
& Enlarged Edition). Prentice-Hall Publishers.
Back
to AAG Grants and Awards Home |