Gildersleeve Prize


The Gildersleeve Prize is an annual award of $1,000 to the author of "the best article of the year" published in the American Journal of Philology. It is awarded by The Johns Hopkins University Press and is named after the classical scholar Basil Lanneau Gildersleeve who founded the journal.
Previous winners are:
YearAuthorArticle
1997Carol Poster
1998Ruth ScodelBardic Performance and Oral Tradition in Homer
1999Lisa Kallet
2000William A. JohnsonToward a Sociology of Reading in Classical Antiquity
2001Stephen M. Beall
2002Zachary P. BilesIntertextual Biography in the Rivalry of Cratinus and Aristophanes
2003Gwendolyn Compton-Engle
2004Kathryn GutzwillerSeeing Thought: Timomachus' Medea and Ecphrastic Epigram
2005Charles C. ChiassonMyth, Ritual, and Authorial Control in Herodotus' Story of Cleobis and Biton
2006David Sider
2007Timothy O'Sullivan
2008Judith FletcherA Trickster's Oath in the Homeric Hymn to Hermes
2009Randy PogorzelskiThe Reassurance of Fratricide in the Aeneid
2010Michael SquireMaking Myron's Cow Moo? Ecphrastic Epigram and the Poetics of Simulation
2011
2012Rachel Ahern KnudsenPoetic Speakers, Sophistic Words
2013James E. G. ZetzelA Contract on Ameria: Law and Legality in Cicero's Pro Roscio Amerino
2014William Josiah Edwards DavisTerence Interrupted: Literary Biography and the Reception of the Terentian Canon
2015Matt CohnTimokles Satyrographos and the Abusive Satyr Play
2016