ASEEES News

Wednesday, September 17, 2025

2025 ASEEES Prize Winners Announced

ASEEES congratulates the 2025 prize winners and honorable mentions for their outstanding scholarship and contributions to the field. 

Winner: Benjamin Nathans (University of Pennsylvania)  
To the Success of Our Hopeless Cause: The Many Lives of the Soviet Dissident Movement (Princeton University Press) 

Winner: Masha Salazkina (Concordia University)  
Romancing Yesenia: How a Mexican Melodrama Shaped Global Popular Culture (University of California Press) 

Honorable Mention: Agnieszka Pasieka (University of Montreal) 
Living Right: Far-Right Youth Activists in Contemporary Europe (Princeton University Press) 

Winner: Samuel Hodgkin (Yale University) 
Persianate Verse and the Poetics of Eastern Internationalism (Cambridge University Press) 

Honorable Mention: Xiaolu Ma (Hong Kong University of Science and Technology) 
Transpatial Modernity: Chinese Cultural Encounters with Russia via Japan (1880–1930) (Harvard University Asia Center) 

Winner: Samuel J. Hirst (Bilkent University) 
Against the Liberal Order: The Soviet Union, Turkey, and Statist Internationalism, 1919-1939 (Oxford University Press) 

Honorable Mention: Maria Cristina Galmarini (College of William & Mary) 
Ambassadors of Social Progress: A History of International Blind Activism in the Cold War (Northern Illinois University Press)

Honorable Mention: Radoslav Yordanov (Harvard University) 
Our Comrades in Havana: Cuba, the Soviet Union, and Eastern Europe, 1959–1991 (Stanford University Press) 

Winner: Vladimir Hamed-Troyansky (University of California, Santa Barbara) 
Empire of Refugees: North Caucasian Muslims and the Late Ottoman State (Stanford University Press) 

Winner: Katya Motyl (Temple University) 
Embodied Histories: New Womanhood in Vienna, 1894-1934 (University of Chicago Press) 

Winner: Simon Morrison (Princeton University)  
Tchaikovsky’s Empire: A New Life of Russia’s Greatest Composer (Yale University Press) 

Winner: Benjamin Nathans (University of Pennsylvania)  
To the Success of Our Hopeless Cause: The Many Lives of the Soviet Dissident Movement (Princeton University Press)

Honorable Mention: Jeffrey S. Hardy (Brigham Young University) 
Finding God in the Gulag: A History of Christianity in the Soviet Penal System (Oxford University Press) 

Winner: Karen Underhill (University of Illinois Chicago) 
Bruno Schulz and Galician Jewish Modernity (Indiana University Press)

Honorable Mention: Agnieszka Pasieka (University of Montreal) 
Living Right: Far-Right Youth Activists in Contemporary Europe (Princeton University Press) 

Winner: Vladimir Hamed-Troyansky (University of California, Santa Barbara) 
Empire of Refugees: North Caucasian Muslims and the Late Ottoman State (Stanford University Press) 

Winner: Polly Zavadivker (University of Delaware) 
A Nation of Refugees: Russia’s Jews in World War I (Oxford University Press) 

Honorable Mention: Masha Kirasirova (New York University Abu Dhabi) 
The Eastern International: Arabs, Central Asians, and Jews in the Soviet Union’s Anticolonial Empire (Oxford University Press) 

Winner: Anne O’Donnell (New York University) 
Power and Possession in the Russian Revolution (Princeton University Press) 

Honorable Mention: Nataliya Kibita (University of Oxford) 
The Institutional Foundations of Ukrainian Democracy: Power Sharing, Regionalism, and Authoritarianism (Oxford University Press) 

Winner: Waitman Wade Beorn (Northumbria University) 
Between the Wires: The Janowska Camp and the Holocaust in Lviv (University of Nebraska Press) 

Honorable Mention: Eugene Finkel (Johns Hopkins University) 
Intent to Destroy: Russia’s Two-Hundred-Year Quest to Dominate Ukraine (Basic Books) 

Winner: Henry Thomson (Arizona State University)
Watching the Watchers: Communist Elites, the Secret Police and Social Order in Cold War Europe (Cambridge University Press)

Honorable Mention: Michele Rivkin-Fish (University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill) 
Unmaking Russia’s Abortion Culture: Family Planning and the Struggle for a Liberal Biopolitics (Vanderbilt University Press) 

Winner: Jessie Barton Hronešová (University College London) 
“The uses of victimhood as a hegemonic meta-narrative in eastern Europe,” Journal of Contemporary European Studies 32,2 (2024): 442-458 

Honorable Mention: Monika Rice (Lafayette College) 
“Dr. Arnold Mostowicz: ‘Not alone in space.’ Moral Injury and the Quest for extraterrestrial Redemption,” Jewish Culture and History 25,4 (2024): 601-631 

Winner: Emma Larson (Princeton University), “Day of Abolition of Kalym in the Kazakh ASSR, 1924-1932″

Honoree: Robert H. Davis (Columbia University/Cornell University) 

Honoree: Edith W. Clowes (University of Virginia)

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