The spoils of war, or at least, writing about it, have just gotten richer, thanks to a new $50,000 prize for the best book in military history to be awarded annually starting in February 2014.
The purpose of the award, known as the Guggenheim-Lehrman Prize, is to restore military history to âan important place in university curricula,â Josiah Bunting III, the president of the Harry Frank Guggenheim Foundation, said in a statement. âIf we do not learn from the conflicts of the past, we will be doomed to repeat them,â he added. âFor the sake of all, we cannot allow this area of scholarship and thinking to atrophy in the United States or abroad.â
The prize, which is funded jointly by the foundation and Lewis E. Lehrman, a co-founder of the Gilder Lehrman Institute of American History, is open to scholars and popular historians, and comes at a moment when military history has a divided audience and identity.
Battle-focused, âdrum and trumpetâ histories like Rick Atkinsonâs âGuns at Last Lightâ dominate bookstores shelves and best-seller lists. Meanwhile, in the academy, the ânew military historyâ focuses on topics like race, gender, and civilian/military relationsâ" âevery aspect of war except the fighting,â as Robert M. Citino, the author of the American Historical Reviewâs most recent overview of the field, put it.
âMilitary history might be marginalized in todayâs academy, but there is a huge population out there who, when they think of âhistory,â tend to think of âmilitary history,ââ Mr. Citino, a visiting professor at the United States Army War College, said via email, adding: âI think the prize is a wonderful recognition that scholars are out there doing cutting-edge work in military history, just as they are in other subfields.â