Howard R. Marraro Prize Explained
The Howard R. Marraro Prize is a biennial prize given to a writer by the Modern Language Association.
Description
The prize is awarded every second year to honor the author of a scholarly work on Italian literature or comparative Italian literature.[1] The prize is open only to members of the association.[1]
The 2017 prize will be awarded for a book published in 2015 or 2016.[1]
Notable winners
Past winners of the prize include:[2]
- 2015 - Marilyn Migiel, Cornell University, for The Ethical Dimension of the Decameron
- 2013 - Justin Steinberg, University of Chicago, for Dante and the Limits of the Law
- 2011 - Marco Ruffini, Northwestern University, for Art without an Author: Vasari’s Lives and Michelangelo’s Death
- 2009 - Christine Poggi, University of Pennsylvania, for Inventing Futurism: The Art and Politics of Artificial Optimism; Jane Tylus, New York University, for Reclaiming Catherine of Siena: Literacy, Literature, and the Signs of Others
- 2007 - Diana Robin, Chicago, Illinois, for Publishing Women: Salons, the Press, and the Counter-Reformation in Sixteenth-Century Italy
- 2005 - Christian Moevs, University of Notre Dame, for The Metaphysics of Dante's Comedy
- 2003 - Marilyn Migiel, Cornell University, for A Rhetoric of the Decameron
- 2001 - Ellen V. Nerenberg, Wesleyan University, for Prison Terms: Representing Confinement during and after Italian Fascism
Notes and References
- https://www.mla.org/Resources/Career/MLA-Honors-and-Awards/Submissions-and-Nominations/Competitions-for-MLA-Publication-Awards/Biennial-Prizes-with-Competitions-in-2018/Howard-R.-Marraro-Prize
- https://www.mla.org/Resources/Career/MLA-Honors-and-Awards/Winners-of-MLA-Prizes/Biennial-Prize-and-Award-Winners/Howard-R.-Marraro-Prize-Winners