News Release

Holberg Prize to Martha C. Nussbaum and Griselda Pollock

The 2020 and 2021 Holberg Prizes were conferred upon Professor Griselda Pollock and Professor Martha C. Nussbaum, respectively

Grant and Award Announcement

The University of Bergen

Holberg Prize

image: Professor Martha C. Nussbaum (left) and Professor Griselda Pollock received the Holberg Prize for 2021, and 2020, on June 9th. view more 

Credit: Photo: Robert Tolchin (Nussbaum)/University of Leeds (Pollock).

At a virtual award ceremony on June 9th, hosted from the University Aula in Bergen, Professor Griselda Pollock and Professor Martha C. Nussbaum received the international research award. Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, both Laureates were honoured at the 2021 Holberg celebrations, which took place this week.

The Holberg Prize is worth NOK 6 million (approx. USD 720,000) and is awarded annually for outstanding contributions to research in the humanities, social sciences, law or theology.

Griselda Pollock received the 2020 Holberg Prize for her profound influence on art history, as well as on related fields--including feminist cinema studies, trauma studies, and Holocaust studies. Pollock helped create feminist art history as an academic field in the 1970s, and as a world-leading figure in feminist, social, queer and postcolonial interventions in the histories of art and cultural studies, she has influenced thinking on gender, ideology, art and visual culture worldwide for over 40 years.

In her acceptance speech, Pollock described how she sees the award not only as a recognition of art history as a discipline, but also of feminism as an historical event: "Not only a very successful world-wide social movement of women actively campaigning for justice, safety, health, security, citizenship and the humanity of all women, feminism of the later 20th century engendered an intellectual and cultural revolution that is its unique contribution to the millennia-long struggle against patriarchy," Pollock said. "To be awarded a prize of this dimension as a contributor to, even as a founding of thinker within, this feminist cultural-theoretical revolution is profound and very moving."

Martha C. Nussbaum received the 2021 Prize for her ground-breaking contributions to research in philosophy, law and related fields, as well as for her role as a prolific public intellectual. Her almost five-decades-long career has focused on normative theorizing about justice and investigation of the nature and role of the emotions. Her research interests include ancient Greek and Roman philosophy, political philosophy, philosophy of literature, feminism, and ethics, as well as both human and animal rights.

"Philosophical analysis, animated by literary imagination, does not solve our problems," Nussbaum said in her acceptance speech. "But philosophy can help us understand ourselves and see where the problems lie, and it can also help us to identify some not so productive ways to respond to them," she continued. "In its methods philosophy also embodies part of the solution: a decent, respectful, rational and imaginatively engaged way of relating to other people."

About the Laureates

Griselda Pollock (b. 1949) is currently Professor Emerita of Social and Critical Histories of Art and Director of the Centre for Cultural Analysis, Theory and History at the University of Leeds. She is a transdisciplinary cultural analyst of modernity and its traumas and a dedicated feminist art historian, which means critically examining the discipline of art history with the assistance of the widest range of cultural theory and multiple perspectives. Pollock has taught at the Universities of Reading, Manchester, and Leeds.

To date, Pollock has published 22 monographs, and four are forthcoming. She has edited 20 books and published hundreds of scholarly articles in journals and books. Her books includeOld Mistresses:Women, Art and Ideology,co-authored with Roszika Parker(1981; newest edition, 2020; Spanish and French translations, 2021),Vision and Difference(1988),Differencing the Canon: Feminist Desire and the Writing of Art's Histories(1999);Encounters in the Virtual Feminist Museum: Time, Space and the Archive (2007),Trauma and Aesthetic Transformation in the Virtual Feminist Museum(2013),Charlotte Salomon and the Theatre of Memory (2018), and, coedited with Max Silverman, Concentrationary Art; Jean Cayrol, the Lazarean and the Everyday in Post-war Film, Literature, Music and Art (2020).

Pollock has written articles and catalogue essays revising our understanding of artists such a Lee Krasner, Eva Hesse, Louise Bourgeois, Lubaina Himid, Georgia O'Keeffe, Vera Frenkel, Bracha Ettinger, Alina Szapocznikow and many more. She has also has edited four volumes of studies in 'Concentrationary Memories' with Max Silverman. From this series, Concentrationary Cinema (2011) was awarded the 2011 Kraszna-Krausz Prize for best book on the moving image.

Martha C. Nussbaum (b. 1947) is the Ernst Freund Distinguished Service Professor of Law and Ethics, at the University of Chicago, appointed in the Law School and Philosophy Department. She has taught at Harvard University, Brown University, the University of Oxford, and the University of Chicago.

Nussbaum has written 27 books, with three in progress. She has also published about 500 articles. Her books include The Fragility of Goodness (1986); In Cultivating Humanity (1997); Sex and Social Justice (1998); and Women and Human Development (2000). In the latter, she develops her Capabilities Approach, which is further explored in Frontiers of Justice (2006) and in Creating Capabilities (2011). Nussbaum presents her theory of emotions in Upheavals of Thought (2001) and develops it further in From Disgust to Humanity (2010), Political Emotions (2013), and Anger and Forgiveness (2016). In The Monarchy of Fear (2018), she turns her attention to the political crisis that polarized the U.S. after the 2016 presidential election. Her latest book is Citadels of Pride: Sexual Abuse, Accountability, and Reconciliation (2021)

###

About the Holberg Prize

Established by the Norwegian Parliament in 2003, the Holberg Prize is one of the largest annual international research prizes awarded to scholars who have made outstanding contributions to research in the arts and humanities, social science, law or theology. The Prize is funded by the Norwegian Government through a direct allocation from the Ministry of Education and Research to the University of Bergen. Previous Laureates include Cass Sunstein, Onora O'Neill, Stephen Greenblatt, Julia Kristeva, Jürgen Habermas, Manuel Castells, and Marina Warner. To learn more about the Holberg Prize and the call for nominations, visit holbergprize.org.


Disclaimer: AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert system.