Carol Sheriff has won the John T. Hubbell Prize for the best article published in Civil War History during 2012. Her study, “Virginia’s Embattled Textbooks: Lessons (Learned and Not) from the Centennial Era,” Civil War History (March 2012), was selected by the journal’s editorial advisory board. The prize earns the recipient a $1,000 award.
Now in its 59th year of publication, Civil War History is published quarterly by the 鶹ý Press. Edited by Lesley Gordon (University of Akron) and Associate Editor Kevin Adams (鶹ý), it is the premier journal in the study of the American Civil War.
In her article, Sheriff thoughtfully reflects on the textbook controversy that erupted in her home state of Virginia in 2010, taking a broad historical view of the topic. She finds that a similar debate concerning textbook content erupted on the eve of the Civil War Centennial, with the intensity of the politics surrounding textbook production and selection only increasing as the Civil Rights Movement expanded throughout the South. Because of those disputes, the Commonwealth of Virginia chose to dispense with enlisting professional historians to write state textbooks. Hence, the current textbook standards, promoting, among other things, Stonewall Jackson’s mythic legions of “black Confederates,” are an ironic outgrowth of Civil Rights agitation in the mid-20th century.
Sheriff is the Class of 2013 Professor of History at the College of William & Mary. Her most recent book is A People at War: Civilians and Soldiers in America’s Civil War (2007), which she coauthored with Scott Reynolds Nelson.
“The John T. Hubbell Prize recognizes the extraordinary contribution to the field of its namesake, who served as editor of Civil War History for 35 years,” says Will Underwood, director of the 鶹ý Press. “This year’s winning article takes a thorough look at how cultural bias can insert itself in the politics of public school textbooks.”
Hubbell is professor emeritus of history at Kent State and director emeritus of the 鶹ý Press.
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