ISCH Prize 2025 Winner

ISCH Prize Competition 2025 for Cultural Historians

Message from the Prize Committee

In order to support cultural historical research and encourage scholars in their early career, the International Society for Cultural History (ISCH) offers the yearly ISCH Prize for the best conference presentation by an early career scholar in the annual ISCH conferences, which in 2025 was held in Rovaniemi, Finland.

The diversity and quality of submissions, this year as in previous editions, was significant. The variety of different topics and approaches counted into cultural history saw presentations coming from various countries and ranging widely in their methodology, geography, source material and subject matter; in a year when the conference was devoted to Human/Nature—Entanglements in Cultural History, included – among others – museums revisited from a rhizomatic perspective, the body of the ascetic as a space in late medieval Siena, as well as emotional responses to animal exploitation in Early Modern Italy.

The ISCH prize committee – which as in the past few years was composed by Alessandro Arcangeli, Josephine Hoegaerts and Jasmin Lukkari – assessed all the presentations by evaluating them according to their methodological innovation, theoretical originality, historiographical significance as well as style, coherence, and visual aid. Ultimately, the panel of judges was unanimous in its decision.

The winning presentation is based on an examination of 11 learned treatises exploring the nature and reality of witches and demons produced in 17th-century England, and on a close reading of two of their authors. In the words of its author, the sources “demonstrate a mode of thinking about nature as not only a morally charged force but also […] as porous and agentive in ways that suggest how ‘witchcraft literature’ can be a rich source for studying historical understandings of nature beyond its mere symbolic meaning – therefore contributing originally to the current scholarly debate about non- (or post-)human agencies. It presents a very clearly articulated argument, which is embedded in existing literature and argues both with some of its precepts, and against some received knowledge.

It gives us great pleasure to award the 2025 ISCH prize to the author of the paper

Rulers of the Air: Understanding Weather in English Demonological Writings,

by Johanna Johannsdottir Damaris, from the University of Gothenburg, Sweden (link).

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Noora Kallioniemi

Ph.D. in Cultural History, Postdoctoral Researcher at the University of Turku.

Popular culture studies; film and television history; entertainment; audiovisual culture; digitized newspaper materials; environmental history and animal studies; film history of the Second World War.

Website: https://research.utu.fi/converis/portal/detail/Person/936427 

 

Pälvi Rantala

Ph. D. in Cultural History, Senior lecturer in Cultural history (University of Lapland), Title of Docent in Applied Cultural History (University of Turku)

Website:
https://research.ulapland.fi/fi/persons/p%C3%A4lvi-rantala
https://purorantala.com/

Cultural history of everyday life, contemporary history, history of sleep and sleeplessness, Northern cultural history, creative writing

 

Daniel Gicu

Researcher at “Nicolae Iorga” Institute of History, Romanian Academy, Bucharest

Popular culture in the nineteenth century; High and low culture in modern Romania; Cultural exchange in modern Romania; Cultural history of folk and fairy tales

 

Josephine Hoegaerts

Professor of European Culture after 1800, University of Amsterdam (the Netherlands)

Prof. dr. J.A.I. (Josephine) Hoegaerts - Universiteit van Amsterdam

History of sound and voice, gender history, history of parliament, 19th cent cultural history, history of the senses, disability history

Liisa-Maija Korhonen

Doctoral researcher at the University of Helsinki

Website.

Histories of colonialism and migration; History of emotions and senses; Latin American history (especially Argentina)

Anna-Leena Perämäki

Ph.D. in Cultural History, Postdoctoral researcher at the University of Turku

Website.

Cultural history of writing, autobiographical sources, everyday life during World War II, women and children at war, holocaust

Jasmin Lukkari

Ph.D. in History, Postdoctoral researcher at the University of Helsinki

Website.

History of ancient Greece and Rome, cultural identity, international relations, Hellenistic kings, the Roman Republic, ancient historiography, historical narratives, narratology

Dr. Cathleen Sarti

Post-Doctoral Associate in the ERC-Project The European Fiscal-Military System 1530-1870, University of Oxford

Personal Website; Academia.edu; Twitter

Political Culture; Northern Europe in 16th/17th century; Royal Studies; Depositions; Counsel