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History and English professors win prestigious national writing awards

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English professor Yiyun Li (above) and history professor Ari Kelman (below) have won, respectively, the Benjamin H. Danks Award for an exceptional young writer and Columbia University's Bancroft Prize.

Two University of California, Davis, professors have won prestigious awards this month for written works in their fields.

Yiyun Li, professor of English, was honored by the American Academy of Arts and Letters with the Benjamin H. Danks Award, given every three years to an exceptional young writer. The prize is $30,000.

“It is a great honor to be recognized by American Academy of Arts and Letters,” said Li. “The award also provides generous financial support, which will give me some space to start the next project.”

Since 2003, the academy has given the award in rotation to a composer of ensemble works, a playwright and a writer.

Li’s latest book, “Kinder Than Solitude,” has been widely reviewed in the media.

Li’s first novel, “The Vagrants,” won a California Book Award gold medal. She has been named by The New Yorker in the past as one of the top 20 fiction writers under age 40 from the United States. She was a 2010 MacArthur Foundation fellow.

Ari Kelman wins Bancroft Prize

Ari Kelman, professor of history and currently associate vice provost of Undergraduate Education for Honors, authored one of two works honored with the prestigious Bancroft Prize, given each year by the trustees of Columbia University for a book in history or diplomacy. The other book honored was “Fear Itself: The New Deal and the Origins of Our Time” by Ira Katznelson. He is a professor at Columbia.

"I'm thrilled to receive such a prestigious award, particularly in a year in which Ira Katznelson, a giant in the profession, is also being honored,” Kelman said. “I'm very grateful to my colleagues, without whose help I couldn't have written this book."

Kelman wrote “A Misplaced Massacre,” a story that grapples with the politics of historical memory and memorializing in Sand Creek, Colo., the site of an 1864 massacre of Cheyennes and Arapahos. According to the award givers, “Kelman deals evenhandedly with the fraught politics of inconclusive and contradictory archival records, the goals of National Park memorialists, the claims of property owners, and Native American efforts to have a historic injustice marked and recalled without perpetrating further violation of the spirits of murdered ancestors.”

He is teaching an honors seminar in civil war history this quarter.

Winners are judged in terms of the scope, significance, depth of research and richness of interpretation they present in the areas of American history and diplomacy. There were 190 books nominated for the 2014 prize.

Kelman will attend a ceremony next month at Columbia University where the $10,000 award will be presented.

Media Resources

Karen Nikos-Rose, Research news (emphasis: arts, humanities and social sciences), 530-219-5472, kmnikos@ucdavis.edu

Secondary Categories

Education Society, Arts & Culture University

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