Since 2018, this prize is sponsored by Professor Dr. Ulrike Detmers and awarded in cooperation with Professor Dr. Ruth Hagengruber, the director of the Center for the History of Women Philosophers and Scientists. “The Center for the History of Women Philosophers and Scientists is pleased and proud to join with Professor Detmers in awarding a prize that explicitly honors scholars whose work best acknowledges the contributions of women philosophers in history,” says Professor Dr. Ruth Hagengruber.
The Elisabeth of Bohemia Prize is intended to acknowledge an internationally known scholar whose work best preserves the memory of women in philosophy. “The awareness that women have contributed to the philosophical tradition is not very common. But it is important to celebrate our knowledge that women of past centuries were active philosophers who raised their voices and have been heard in former times,” explains Professor Ruth Hagengruber.
The prize is awarded to an outstanding contemporary philosopher in memory of Elisabeth of Bohemia (1618-1680). She was the eldest daughter of Prince Friedrich V. of the Palatinate and his wife Elisabeth Stuart, a granddaughter of Maria Stuart. In her time Elisabeth of Bohemia was also a well-known European intellectual and pupil of Descartes. “I have been fighting for many years to ensure that women get the place in society that they deserve,” says Professor Ulrike Detmers. “It is important to raise awareness about women in the history of philosophy and thereby to revitalize the relevance of the philosophical discipline.”
Take a closer look at the Elisabeth of Bohemia prize, which is awarded by the Center for the History of Women Philosophers and Scientists. The brochure contains information about the Prize, the former laureates, the donor Ulrike Detmers and information about Elisabeth of Bohemia.
The Elisabeth of Bohemia Prize will be awarded during the XXV World Congress of Philosophy organized by the FISP in Rome. For more see here.
The Elisabeth of Bohemia Prize donated by Ulrike Detmers, will be awarded by Ruth Hagengruber to an outstanding contemporary philosopher in honor of the philosopher Elisabeth of Bohemia (1618-1680).
This years winner of the endowed prize (3000EUR) is Marie Pauline Eboh. Prof. Marie Pauline Eboh is an Emerita Professor of Philosophy, a Fellow of the Philosophers Association of Nigeria (PAN), a Fellow of the Association of Professional Philosophers of Nigeria (APPON), a renowned scholar, a three-time Director of the Institute of Foundation Studies, and the Founding Dean of the Faculty of Humanities, Rivers State University, Port Harcourt, Nigeria. She is a prolific author, having published eighteen books, numerous journal articles, chapters in books, and made five entries in the Encyclopaedia of African Religions and Philosophy. A primary focus of her research was the question of the status of women in Africa, as evidenced by the following articles: “The woman question: African and Western perspectives”; “Aetiology of Feminist, Womanist, Femalist and Gynist Philosophy”; Philosophy, women, and responsible leadership in Africa” and “The woman being: Its nature and functions”. Prof. Eboh asserts that the emancipation of women is a pivotal national issue, and she critiques gender politics, interrogating the mistreatment, the second-class status, and some of the socio-cultural gender roles of women in Africa. Her most recent publications include the Anthology of Authentic African Philosophy: A Revisionist View, published in 2023. She is credited with developing gynism, an African gender philosophy, that aims to emancipate both men and women. She is a life member of the International Society for Universal Dialogue (ISUD). She has been the recipient of many awards including the Jacobsen Research Fellowship Award (Paris, 1991), the Great minds Foundation Youth Ambassador Award (Port Harcourt, 2016) and the Our Lady Seat of Wisdom Catholic Chaplaincy, Rivers State University, Wisdom Award (Port Harcourt, 2016).
This years winner of the lifetime achievement prize is Concha Roldán Panadero. Concha Roldán Panadero is a Spanish feminist philosopher and Research Professor. From 2008 to 2023, she held the position of Director of the Institute of Philosophy of the Spanish National Research Council (CSIC). Since 2017, she has served as President of the GENET Association, a Network of Gender Studies Transversal, having previously held the position of Vice President and played an instrumental role in its development. Her numerous publications on women philosophers and gender issues include the book El papel de las mujeres en la Filosofía (The Role of Women in Philosophy) and the chapter “Inferiority, invsibility and exclusion. The Absence of Women from the ‘Official’ Histories of Philosophy,” in the collective work Concepts in Women. Materials for an inclusive history of concepts. In 2019, she was awarded the “TOP 100: Leading Women in Spain Award” in the Category: Women Thinkers.
The Elisabeth of Bohemia Prize donated by Ulrike Detmers, will be awarded to an outstanding contemporary philosopher in honor of the philosopher Elisabeth of Bohemia (1618-1680).
The Elisabeth of Bohemia Prize is an award that celebrates the long history of women in philosophy. The prize is awarded to an international philosopher for outstanding services to research on women in the history of philosophy. It is the first prize to acknowledge the resarch into the history of women philosophers and and annually awarded in cooporation with the donator by Ruth Edith Hagengruber, director of the Center for the History of Women Philosophers and Scientists.
This years winner is Laura Aurora Benítez Grobet. She studied Philosophy at the National Autonomous University of Mexico (UNAM), where last March she was appointed Emerita Professor, the highest possible distinction at UNAM. To describe Sor Juana as a “philosopher”, as Professor Benítez did before anyone else, is not a minor achievement: although for centuries Sor Juana’s writings have sparked the admiration of many a reader, hardly anyone noticed or took seriously the strictly philosophical dimension of her ideas. Going against the grain, Laura Benítez reconstructed Sor Juana’s conception on the nature of knowledge and, within it, the role of understanding and sensitivity. Hence, where others had only seen wit, beauty and psychological depth, Laura Benítez identified a complex epistemological framework, in tune and on a par with the greatest thinkers of her time. Find out more about Laura Aurora Benítez Grobet here.
Elisabeth of Bohemia (1618-1680) was the eldest daughter of Prince Friedrich V. of the Palatinate and his wife Elisabeth Stuart, a granddaughter of Maria Stuart. In her time Elisabeth of Bohemia was also a well-known European intellectual and one of the most famous correspondents of Descartes.
The winner, Laura Aurora Benítez Grobet, will be honoured and festively introduced by three laudatory speeches. The speakers are Alejandra Velázquez, Teresa Rodríguez and Aurelia Valero Pie. A congratulation speech will be held by Dr. Juan Antonio Cruz Parcero, Director of the Institute of Philosophy at UNAM.
The Elisabeth of Bohemia Prize Ceremony will be held via ZOOM on Wednesday, August 16, 2023 at 7 PM (UTC+2/ German Time), which is 11 AM (UTC-6/Mexican Time). The Ceremony can be viewed via the following link:
https://uni-paderborn-de.zoom.us/j/92725557688?pwd=aU9pb0NEYnRuc2lTamwwRUtuRklHUT09
Meeting-ID: 927 2555 7688
Kenncode: 035156
Organizer: Center for the History of Women Philosophers and Scientists
Link to the Ceremony video: https://youtu.be/TRmAnNw3pA4?si=xUF5mWKV9beszT1Y
On September 28th, 2022, the Elisabeth of Bohemia Prize was awarded to an outstanding contemporary philosopher in honor of Elisabeth of Bohemia (1618-1680). Elisabeth of Bohemia was the eldest daughter of Prince Friedrich V. of the Palatinate and his wife Elisabeth Stuart, a granddaughter of Maria Stuart. In her time Elisabeth of Bohemia was also a well-known European intellectual and one of the most famous correspondents of Descartes.
The Elisabeth of Bohemia Prize honors scholars whose work best acknowledges the contributions of women to the history of philosophy. The prize is awarded by the Center for the History of Women Philosophers and by its director, Prof. Ruth Hagengruber, at Paderborn University. The award is donated by Prof. Ulrike Detmers, spokeswoman of the Mestemacher Group and professor at Bielefeld University of Applied Sciences.
This year the prize went to Professor Sarah Hutton, from the University of York. She is well known to all of us, especially here in Paderborn, as she has often visited us for Conferences and talks, including in 2014 as a Visiting Professor at the Center for the History of Women Philosophers and Scientists.
Her research focuses on Renaissance and Seventeenth-century literature and intellectual history, including the history of science and history of philosophy. She is also a specialist in the History of Women Philosophers and one of the leading international experts on early modern women’s writing. She has published, among other book, a monograph on Anne Conway: Anne Conway. A Woman Philosopher, Cambridge University Press, 2004; and a revised edition of The Conway Letters, originally edited by Marjorie Nicolson. She also published many articles on Anne Conway, Margaret Cavendish, Mary Astell and Émilie du Châtelet.
Organizer: Center for the History of Women Philosophers and Scientists
Award Committee 2022:
Link to the Ceremony video: https://youtu.be/uid2NZXfVxo?si=ajgN4LPk45u5Dhsa
In 2021, the Elisabeth of Bohemia Prize was awarded on July 18, 2021 at the XXVIII. World Congress of the International Association of Women Philosophers (IAPh). Due to the delay caused by the Covid-19 pandemic, the award committee has decided that this year’s prize should be divided in two parts. To match the theme “Defining the Future, Rethinking the Past” with which the Center for the History of Women Philosophers and Scientists has shaped the conference:
In a symbolical act that goes back in time, the foremothers of the International Association of Women Philosophers (IAPH), first founded in 1976 , were acknowledged. The occasion was commemorated with a keynote on the early days of the IAPh by Herta Nagl-Dozekal and a workshop by Gabriele Gutzmann, one of the founding members of the IAPh.
The financial acknowledgement goes to the future and is awarded to Mitieli Seixas da Silva, Professor of Philosophy at the Federal University of Santa Maria, Brazil, and member of the research group “Rede Brasileira de Mulheres Filósofas” on the history of women philosophers. The financial award of the Elisabeth of Bohemia prize is dedicated to acknowledge Professor da Silva’s endeavor to consolidate research on the history of women philosophers in Brazil.
Mitieli Seixas da Silva is a promising junior researcher with outstanding experience and who, in the opinion of the committee, deserves this award. She has a PhD in Philosophy from the Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul with a doctoral dissertation on Kant’s theoretical philosophy, advised by Professor Silvia Altmann (UFRGS) and partially by Professor Hannah Ginsbourg (University of California -Berkeley). She also received a scholarship for the collaborative project Erasmus Master Mundus–Europhilosophie, during which she researched at the Université Catholique de Louvain, the Bergische Universität Wuppertal and at the Université du Luxembourg.
Next to interests in Modern Philosophy and didactics, Mitieli Seixas da Silva is dedicated to revisiting the canon of modern history of philosophy through the work of modern women philosophers and has rendered outstanding services, especially with her project on “Émilie du Châtelet between Experience and Reason in the 18th Century: Studies in the Formation of the Philosophical Canon, Theories of Knowledge, and the History of Women Philosophers”.
Award Committee 2021:
Donor: Ulrike Detmers (Bielefeld University)
This year’s laureate of the Elisabeth of Bohemia Prize, donated by Ulrike Detmers, is Prof. em. Mary Ellen Waithe (Cleveland State University, Ohio). She was awarded with the prize during the Closing Ceremony of the Libori Summer School 2019.
Mary Ellen Waithe is the author of the ground-breaking book series “A History of Women Philosophers”, published from 1987 to 1995, from ancient to contemporary women philosophers. With this work, she was the first to publish a book dedicated solely to women philosophers and a pioneer in the field of study on women philosophers. Her dedication motivated many others to join her cause and the project provided a much-needed impulse to further the recognition of women philosophers. The series presents an unparalleled contribution to the research on women in the history of philosophy and is extremely relevant to this day. The Center for the History of Women Philosophers and Scientists, under the direction of Prof. Ruth Hagengruber, is proud to honor such an important effort to restore women’s contributions to the history of philosophy.
The Call for Papers for the Elisabeth of Bohemia Prize 2019 can be found here.
Award Committee 2019:
Donor: Ulrike Detmers (Bielefeld University)
The winner, Professor Lisa Shapiro (Simon Frazer University, Canada), was announced on May 19, 2018, during the conference ‘Elisabeth of Bohemia (1618-1680): Life and Legacy’ celebrating the fourth centenary of her birth. The conference was sponsored by the Fritz Thyssen Stiftung with the support of the Deutsche Gesellschaft für Philosophie, the DFG Arbeitsgruppe, ‘Frauen in der Geschichte der Philosophie’ and the Center for the History of Women Philosophers and Scientists, Paderborn University.
“I am very honored to receive the first Ulrike Detmers Elisabeth of Bohemia and Herford Prize, recognizing my efforts in making accessible and in understanding the philosophical views of Princess Elisabeth.
The Ulrike Detmers Elisabeth of Bohemia Prize demonstrates a similar vision for recognizing the work being done to raise awareness about women in the history of philosophy and thereby to revitalize the discipline. We are at an important moment right now, with work being done by so many people, including the important work of Prof. Dr. Ruth Hagengruber and the Centre for the History of Women Philosophers and Scientists at Paderborn University, to rehabilitate the work of women philosophers throughout our history.
Thank you, Professor Detmers, for creating this award and to the awards committee for this great honour.”
– Lisa Shapiro
Award Committee 2018:
Donor: Ulrike Detmers (Bielefeld University)
Prof. Dr. Sarah Hutton (University of York), member of the award committee, interviews Prof. Dr. Lisa Shapiro (Simon Frazer University Canada), the winner of the first Elisabeth of Bohemia and Herford Prize 2018.
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