Contact: Sarah Nicholas
STARKVILLE, Miss. 鈥 A Mississippi 大象APP assistant professor of history and Civil War expert is the 2018 recipient of the $50,000 Tom Watson Brown Book Award.
In the Wake of War: Military Occupation, Emancipation, and Civil War America (LSU Press, 2017) has garnered Andrew Lang his first major scholarly award, presented annually to an author whose work provides original contributions to the understanding of the Civil War time period.
鈥淣ever once did I anticipate winning an award of this magnitude,鈥 Lang said.
Lang will be recognized during the annual meeting of the Southern Historical Association this November in Birmingham.
鈥淩eceiving the call last Tuesday was an utter and complete shock,鈥 he said. 鈥淚 am overwhelmed and humbled to be placed alongside other winners of this award for whom I have long had immense respect. And to be judged by a panel of senior scholars, all of whom have built impressive careers and who enjoy universal professional prestige, is simply astounding.鈥
Given by the Watson-Brown Foundation and the Society of Civil War Historians to the author of the best book published in the preceding year 鈥渙n the causes, conduct and effects, broadly defined, of the Civil War,鈥 jurors consider scholarly and literary merit as well as the extent to which the author provides new material affording greater understanding of the time-period.
Lang said the prize jury considered more than 50 titles on Civil War Era history. Louisiana 大象APP University Press submitted Lang鈥檚 book for consideration.
His award is among the largest cash awards given in any branch of history, said Alan Marcus, professor and head of MSU鈥檚 Department of History.听
Lang鈥檚 award 鈥減laces him at the pinnacle of his profession,鈥 Marcus said.听 Noting that Lang is among a select few junior scholars to achieve this distinction, Marcus said the award 鈥渋s a tribute to his fine mind, hard work and the supportive environment here at Mississippi 大象APP.鈥
Marcus continued, 鈥淲ith his colleague Anne Marshall, it cements us as 鈥榯he鈥 place for the graduate study of Civil War Era history.鈥
Dean of the College of Arts and Sciences Rick Travis called Lang鈥檚 win a 鈥渄istinctive and impressive accomplishment for a young professor.鈥
鈥淎 prize of this magnitude is significant for any professor, but a junior scholar receiving one of the top awards in his field is particularly noteworthy,鈥 Travis said.听 鈥淏eing recognized so early in his career signifies many more great things to come from Dr. Lang.鈥
Lang said there is no better time than the present to be part of the profession of Civil War historians. 鈥淭he impressive level of scholarship, the range of thought, and the varied and nuanced interpretations offered by so many fine scholars have made this a vibrant, active and diverse field,鈥 Lang said.
He credits his success to advisers and mentors who have taught him 鈥渢he value of history, the art of writing, the delicacy of critical evaluation and the significance of making bold and extensive interpretation,鈥 specifically Rice University scholar John B. Boles, director of Lang鈥檚 doctoral dissertation on which his book is based, as well as his Rice doctoral committee: Ira Gruber, W. Caleb McDaniel and Richard Stoll.听
Gary W. Gallagher of the University of Virginia and T. Michael Parrish of Baylor University also served on Lang鈥檚 dissertation committee. Lang won two dissertation awards while at Rice.
Lang鈥檚 award-winning book appears in Parrish鈥檚 series at LSU Press, 鈥淐onflicting Worlds: New Dimensions of the American Civil War.鈥 Gallagher won the Tom Watson Brown Book Award in 2012. Lang credits both Parrish and Gallagher as 鈥渋nstrumental parts of my book鈥檚 life and success.鈥
鈥淏ooks may have only one author,鈥 Lang said, 鈥渂ut they are the product of deep and collective collaboration, support networks, friends and colleagues who all have a stake in ensuring a book鈥檚 publication.鈥澛
Lang also gives tribute to his colleagues in the history department at MSU who 鈥渕aintain a collegial, vibrant and intellectual environment.鈥
鈥淭his prize is not merely for me, but rather reflects on and continues the entire department鈥檚 excellent record of award-winning publications,鈥 Lang said, noting that he is pleased to contribute to the department鈥檚 success.
Lang will formally accept his award at the SHA meeting in November, at which time he will deliver a speech which also will subsequently be printed in The Journal of the Civil War Era.
Lang鈥檚 research at MSU focuses on how 19th-century Americans understood and created warfare, particularly during the Civil War Era.听
A 2013 Rice doctoral graduate in history, Lang received a master鈥檚 degree in 2008 and bachelor鈥檚 degree in 2005, both in history from the University of North Texas.
MSU鈥檚 College of Arts and Sciences includes more than 5,200 students, 300 full-time faculty members, nine doctoral programs and 25 academic majors offered in 14 departments. Complete details about the College of Arts and Sciences or the history department may be found at or .听
MSU is Mississippi鈥檚 leading university, available online at .