Apply for the Robert Makus Critical Essay Contest
ROBERT MAKUS CRITICAL ESSAY PRIZE (aka “The Makus Prize”)
This is a $100 annual cash prize awarded at the end of spring semester for the best
critical essay written by an undergraduate or graduate student at UOG. Students currently
enrolled full or part-time in any UOG college or program may submit one essay per
year.
The prize essay should be thoughtful and cogently argued, perhaps clever and/or profound.
Interdisciplinary thinking is preferred but not required. The essay should be more
or less comprehensible to college-educated specialists and non-specialists, relatively
free of jargon, and stay true to the inventive spirit of the essay, not the research
article. Footnotes are welcome, if needed, but should be kept to a minimum.*
• Submission Deadline: May 1, 2017 by 4:00 p.m.
• Submit essay to Kat Duenas in DEAL office for receipt acknowledgment (time stamp).
The DEAL office is located on the 2nd floor of the English & Communications Building.
• Format is MLA or Chicago Style, double-spaced, 12 pt. Times New Roman.
• Length should be 5-10 pages, 8 ½ x 11 paper (hardcopy submission only).
• Author’s Name should be printed on top, left-hand corner of first page.
• No co-authored essays accepted.
• The prize will be awarded at the CLASS Annual Awards Day in May, 2016.
• If the judges determine that there is no prize winner, the contest will resume
the following year. Submitted essays will not be returned, and rejected submissions
will not be acknowledged. The only person to hear from the judges is the prize winner.
• All essays will be rigorously vetted for plagiarism.
*For more insights into the nature of the essay as a distinct genre of writing, see
Theodor Adorno, "The Essay as Form," New German Critique, 32:151-171 (1984). This
same essay, which sets the gold standard for essay writing, is published in Theodor
Adorno, Notes to Literature, Vol. One, trans. Shierry W. Nicholsen (New York: Columbia
UP, 1991), 3-23. Other informative works on the essay include G. Douglas Atkins, Tracing
the Essay: Through Experience to Truth (Athens, GA: University of Georgia Press, 2005),
and Robert Con Davis’s “Back to the Essay,” available online as a PDF.
______________________
Robert “Bob” Makus (died July 14, 2002) was a fellow doctoral student with Dr. Schreiner
(of DEAL) in the Hermeneutics cohort under Dr. Joseph Kockelmans at Pennsylvania State
University. Bob died of cancer soon after beginning his teaching career in philosophy
at University of San Francisco. He was a philosophical writer of exceptional promise
and carried himself with dignity unto the moment of his untimely demise. Dr. Schreiner
has established the prize in memory of his friend and colleague.
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