HISTARCH Archives

HISTORICAL ARCHAEOLOGY

HISTARCH@COMMUNITY.LSOFT.COM

Options: Use Forum View

Use Monospaced Font
Show Text Part by Default
Show All Mail Headers

Message: [<< First] [< Prev] [Next >] [Last >>]
Topic: [<< First] [< Prev] [Next >] [Last >>]
Author: [<< First] [< Prev] [Next >] [Last >>]

Print Reply
Subject:
From:
Terry Majewski <[log in to unmask]>
Reply To:
HISTORICAL ARCHAEOLOGY <[log in to unmask]>
Date:
Mon, 19 May 2014 17:10:58 +0000
Content-Type:
text/plain
Parts/Attachments:
text/plain (78 lines)
The awards section of the SHA Web site is in the process of being updated.  The information here supersedes anything currently on the SHA Web site. If you have questions, please contact me directly.

Teresita Majewski, Ph.D., RPA, FSA
Vice President
Statistical Research, Inc.
(520) 721-4309 (office)
(520) 298-7044 (fax)
(520) 907-9677 (cell)
www.sricrm.com<http://www.sricrm.com/>

Friday July 11, 2014, Deadline for Submitting Dissertations for Consideration for the
the Society for Historical Archaeology's 2015  Kathleen Kirk Gilmore Dissertation Award

The 2015 Kathleen Kirk Gilmore Dissertation Award will be presented to a recent graduate whose dissertation is considered by the Kathleen Kirk Gilmore Dissertation Award Panel to be an outstanding contribution to historical archaeology. In January 2011, the SHA Board of Directors voted to change the name of the SHA Dissertation Prize to the Kathleen Kirk Gilmore Dissertation Award to honor Kathleen Kirk Gilmore, who passed away in 2010. She was a pioneer in the field of historical archaeology and a past president of the SHA.

The awardee will receive $1,000 at the time the award is presented at the annual meeting. Receipt of the award and the monetary prize are no longer dependent upon publication of the dissertation with the University Press of Florida. Awardees may take their dissertation to any press, including SHA.

If the winner chooses to work with SHA on publication of their dissertation, he or she will

  *   receive the endorsement of the society and an associate editor to guide them through the publication process
  *   receive assistance from SHA in finding the appropriate press and contract arrangements
  *   be required to assign copyright of the manuscript and donate any royalties for their book to SHA
  *   agree not to submit their dissertation for consideration elsewhere

If the choice is made not to publish through SHA, the winner is responsible for arranging publication on his or her own.

To be considered for the 2015 award, which will be presented at the annual meeting in Seattle, Washington, in January 2015, nominees must have defended their dissertations and received a Ph.D. within three years prior to May 31, 2014. The nominator is responsible for providing verification of the date of the defense and the individual's graduation date in the nomination letter. One unbound copy of the complete dissertation and one copy on CD-ROM or DVD must be provided to Teresita Majewski, chair of the Society for Historical Archaeology Awards Committee, by the date noted below (contact the chair for alternate methods to submit the digital version of the dissertation if necessary). The paper and digital copies of the dissertation will not be returned. Very Important: The nominator or nominee must provide the nominee's contact information, including current mailing address, e-mail address, and telephone number(s).

Nominations must be made by nonstudent SHA members and must consist of one nomination letter that makes a case for the dissertation. Self-nominations will not be accepted. NOMINEES MUST BE MEMBERS OF THE SOCIETY FOR HISTORICAL ARCHAEOLOGY. The nominator must provide verification of both his/her SHA membership status as well as that of the nominee.

Deadline for receipt of all nomination materials is Friday, July 11, 2014, for the 2015 prize. The panel will begin their deliberations shortly thereafter.

The winner will be selected by early Fall 2014.

For more information or to submit nomination materials:

Kathleen Kirk Gilmore Dissertation Award
c/o Teresita Majewski, Chair, SHA Awards Committee
Statistical Research, Inc.
6099 East Speedway Blvd.
Tucson, AZ 85712
PHONE: (520) 721-4309 (office); (520) 907-9677 (cell)
FAX: (520) 298-7044
E-mail: [log in to unmask]<mailto:[log in to unmask]>

Previous Dissertation Prize Winners:

ˇ         2001 - Michelle M. Terrell, An Historical Archaeology of the 17th- and 18th- Century Jewish Community of Nevis, British West Indies, published by SHA-UPF in 2005 as The Jewish Community of Early Colonial Nevis: A Historical Archaeological Study<http://www.upf.com/book.asp?id=TERRES03>

ˇ         2002 - No prize was awarded

ˇ         2003 - Kurt Jordan, The Archaeology of Iroquois Restoration: Settlement, Housing, and Economy at a Dispersed Seneca Community, ca. A.D. 1715-1754, published by SHA-UPF in 2008 as The Seneca Restoration, 1715-1754: An Iroquois Local Political Economy<http://www.upf.com/book.asp?id=JORDAF06>

ˇ         2004 - Nathan Richards, Deep Structures: An Examination of Deliberate Watercraft Abandonment in Australia, published by SHA-UPF in 2008 as Ships' Graveyards: Abandoned Watercraft and the Archaeological Formation Process<http://www.upf.com/book.asp?id=RICHA001>

ˇ         2005 - J. Cameron Monroe, Building Dahomey: Landscape, Architecture and Political Order in Atlantic West Africa

ˇ         2006 - Elizabeth Kellar, Construction and Expression of Identity: An Archaeological Investigation of the Laborer Villages at Adrian Estate, St.John, USVI

ˇ         2007 - Elizabeth Jordan, "From Time Immemorial": Washerwomen, Culture, and Community in Capetown, South Africa

ˇ         2008 - Sarah Croucher, Plantations on Zanzibar: An Archaeological Approach to Complex Identities, forthcoming from Springer in 2011 as Capitalism and Cloves: An Archaeology of Plantation Life in Nineteenth Century Zanzibar<http://www.springer.com/social+sciences/archaeology+%26+anthropology/book/978-1-4419-8470-8?changeHeader>

ˇ         2009 - Neil L. Norman, An Archaeology of West African Atlanticization: Regional Analysis of the Huedan Palace Districts and Countryside, Benin, 1650-1727

ˇ         2010 - Meredith Linn, From Typhus to Tuberculosis and Fractures in Between: A Visceral Historical Archaeology of Irish Immigrant Life in New York City 1845-1870

ˇ         2011 - Gérard Chouin, Forests of Power and Memory: An Archaeology of Sacred Groves in the Eguafo Polity, Southern Ghana (c. 500-1900 A.D.)

ˇ         2012 - Liza Gijanto, Change and the Era of the Atlantic Trade: Commerce and Interaction in the Niumi Commercial Center (The Gambia).

ˇ         2013 - Rebecca Sara Graff, The Vanishing City: Time, Tourism, and the Archaeology of Event at Chicago's 1893 World's Columbian Exposition.

ˇ         2014 - Felipe Gaitán Ammann, An Archaeology of the Slave Trade in Late-Seventeenth Century Panama (1663-1674)


This communication is confidential and is intended only for the use of the individual or entity named above.  If you have received this communication in error, please immediately destroy it and notify the sender by reply e-mail or by telephone (909) 335-1896 (call collect).

ATOM RSS1 RSS2