Yasuo Sakakibara Prize

The Yasuo Sakakibara Prize honors the best paper presented by an international scholar at the annual meeting of the American Studies Association. The winner receives $500 and recognition at 0ur annual meeting.

2025 recipient Wigbertson Julian Isenia (right) with prize announcer Keith Feldman at the 2025 ASA conference.

Eligibility Requirements

Any international scholar who has had their paper accepted to the upcoming ASA annual meeting is eligible to apply. Applicants must also be:

  • Registered for the annual meeting
  • Current members of the American Studies Association (or an affiliated international American Studies Association)

Any paper given at the meeting – either in-person or virtually – is eligible for consideration, provided that it does not exceed 12 pages. The paper should be a work-in-progress.

Submission Instructions

Please compile the following materials into a single PDF document and submit through the submission form linked below.

  • A cover page with author’s name, institutional affiliation, paper title, and contact information
  • The conference paper: 10-12 pages in length (approximately 3,500 words), including citations and notes. Illustrations are not counted as part of the page limit.

Please contact asastaff<at>theasa.net with questions.

Award Namesake

The prize honors Yasuo Sakakibara, Professor Emeritus of Economics and first chair of the Graduate School in American Studies at Doshisha University and a past president of the Japanese Association for American Studies.

Prize Recipients

  • 2025: Wigbertson Julian Isenia, “MARIKU! Queer, Trans, and Otherwise in the Afterlife of Empire”
  • 2024: Nazli Akhtari, “Fugitive Listening to Jina’s Revolution’s Archive”
  • 2023: Lucy El-Sherif, McMaster University,“’Dabke is Better than a Thousand Lectures About Islamophobia’: Palestine, Arab Mothering and the Research Imagination”
  • 2022: Kristin Moriah, Queen’s University, “A Matter of Mastery: Blackness and Sound at the Edge of the Atlantic”
  • 2021: Kodai Abe, “Two Ground Zeros: The Transpacific Victimology of Hiroshima and 9/11”
  • 2020: No selection
  • 2019: Chenrui Zhao, Binghamton University, “Resistance from the ‘Unreal’: Trouble of the Neoliberal Racial Project in Chimamanda Adichie’s Americanah
  • 2018: Christine “Xine” Yao, University College London, United Kingdom, “(Un)Sympathetic Babo: Blackness, Science, and the Sentimental Politics of Recognition”
  • 2017: No selection
  • 2016: Chien-Ting Lin, National Central University, Taiwan, “Buddha Bless America: Militarized Medical Humanitarianism and Cold War Humanism”
  • 2015: Kirsty Robertson, University of Western Ontario, Canada, “Oil Futures/Petro-Fabrics”
  • 2014: Mary Chapman, University of British Columbia, “Playing in the Mediascape: A Pseudonymous Travelogue by Sui Sin Far/Edith Eaton”
  • 2013: Ethan Blue, University of Western Australia, “The Deportation Special: Mobile Carceral Space and the Emergence of Mass Deportation”
  • 2012: Leslie Paris, University of British Columbia, “‘˜The Mess They Leave Behind’: American Children and Environmental Activism, 1962-1980”
  • 2011: Ira Dworkin, The American University in Cairo (Egypt), “George Washington Williams, King Leopold II, and African American Emigration to the Congo”
  • 2010: Chris Lee, University of British Columbia, “New Criticism as Modernization”
  • 2009: Leslie Paris, University of British Columbia, “Happily Ever After: Reading Free to Be … You and Me”
  • 2008: Chih-ming Wang, Academia Sinica, Taiwan, “How does America Mean in Chinese? Overseas Student Writing and Trans-Pacific American Studies”
  • 2007: No selection
  • 2006: Mary Chapman, University of British Columbia, Canada, “Sui Sin Far and the Discourses of the American and Chinese Suffrage Movements in the 1910’s”
  • 2005: Finis Dunaway, Trent University, Canada, “Gas Masks, Pogo, and the Ecological Indian: Earth Day and the Visual Politics of American Environmentalism”
  • 2004: Lily Cho, University of Western Ontario, Canada, “Seeing through Smoke: Situating the Coolie within the Discourse of Freedom”
  • 2003: Min-Jung Kim, Ewha Woman’s University, Seoul, Korea, “Nation, Immigration, and National Identity in Ronyoung Kim’s Clay Walls”
  • 2002: Joanne M. Mancini, University of Sussex, United Kingdom, “The Country Age: Globalization and Modernity in an American Region”