Publication Awards
Congratulations to the following authors who have been recognized and honoured for their contribution to Ukrainian scholarly studies.
Winner of the 1989 Antonovych Foundation History Prize
Galician Villagers and the Ukrainian National Movement in the Nineteenth Century
John-Paul Himka
This first case study of how the East European peasantry was drawn into national politics focuses on the Ukrainians of Galicia (1772–1914). On the basis of first-hand testimony by peasants and rural notables, it demonstrates that the peasants' political consciousness was forged by serfdom, reforms initiated by the state, and the penetration of a money economy. This book breaks new ground on related issues, including the …
Winner of the 1989 Cenko Prize in Ukrainian Bibliography
RR No. 51 Ukrainian Literature in English: Articles in Journals and Collections, 1840-1965
Marta Tarnawsky
The CIUS Research Report No. 51, Ukrainian Literature in English: Articles in Journals and Collections, 1840-1965, compiled and edited by Marta Tarnawsky, is the second CIUS Press publication of Ms. Tarnawsky's major continuing bibliographic project which attempts, for the first time, a comprehensive coverage of translations from and materials about Ukrainian literature published in English from the earliest known …
Winner of the 1999 Antonovych Foundation Literary Prize
Ukraine between East and West: Essays on Cultural History to the Early Eighteenth Century
Ihor Sevcenko
Ihor Ševčenko’s Ukraine between East and West explores the development of Ukrainian cultural identity under the disparate influences of the Byzantine Empire and western Europe, mediated through Poland. Byzantium was the source from which Kyivan Rus' received Christianity and a highly developed literary and artistic culture, which stimulated Kyiv's own achievements in those fields. Professor Ševčenko shows how the …
Winner of the 2003 AAUS Book Prize
A Concordance to the Poetic Works of Taras Shevchenko
George Hawrysch
This magnificent four-volume publication of more than 3,200 pages is a complete alphabetical index of the words contained in Shevchenko's Ukrainian- and Russian-language poetry, showing both the places where each word may be found and its immediate textual setting. The Concordance is a major milestone, being the first and only instance of this genre in Ukrainian studies. It promises to be an important and useful …
Olga Andriewski and George Grabowicz Winners of the 2004 AAUS Article Prize
Culture, Nation and Identity: The Ukrainian-Russian Encounter (1600–1945)
Mark von Hagen
The series of four sessions on the Russian-Ukrainian encounter held alternately at Columbia University and Cologne University from June 1994 to September 1995 had their origin in both the world of great political events and the world of scholarly discussion. Ukraine's declaration of independence, ratified by the referendum of 1 December 1991, and subsequent international recognition were followed by the dissolution of the Soviet …
Winner of the 2004 AAUS Translation Prize
History of Ukraine-Rus'. Volume 8
Mykhailo Hrushevsky
Mykhailo Hrushevsky's History of Ukraine-Rus,' Volume 8: The Cossack Age, 1626-1650 deals with the period when the Cossacks' emergence as a political power and the Khmelnytsky Uprising made Ukraine a focal point in European and Near Eastern affairs. Based on an exhaustive examination of the sources and scholarly literature, Hrushevsky's volume 8 stands as the most comprehensive account of this dramatic period in …
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