In order to encourage, recognise, and support writing that engages audiences in critical and contemporary issues in design writing, the Design History Society initiated a new writing prize in 2017. Running for the third time in 2019, this prize is open to scholars, researchers, critics, practitioners and educators within and outside the Society who demonstrate a commitment to furthering the work of critical debate in design through writing. The aim of the Design Writing Prize, in addition to promoting and celebrating excellent new work, is to advocate writing as a necessary and creative practice for communicating ideas related to design. In this vein, entries that include a variety of modes such as essays, interviews, reviews or editorial commentary are welcome and can either be published works or in manuscript phase. 

Priya Khanchandani, Editor of design and architecture magazine ICON will be the guest judge for the 2019 Design Writing Prize. Khanchandani was the curator of the India Pavilion at London Design Biennale (2018) andco-runs Museums Detox, a collective of museum professionals campaigning for greater diversity in the arts.

The Design Writing Prize includes:

  • A cash award of £150 given by the Design History Society
  • One year's membership of the Design History Society (includes subscription to the Journal of Design Historyand eligibility to apply for further grants and awards)
  • Free place at the Design History Society conference “The Cost of Design”, 5-7 September 2019, Northumbria University, Newcastle-Upon-Tyne, and a free place at the gala dinner
  • Winners of the Design Writing Prize are announced at the Annual DHS Conference. All authors are informed of the competition results in late July.

Essay Competition and Entry requirements:

  • The entry must be authored from 2018 onwards and thus be recent writing
  • Entries should not exceed 3,500 words and must be written in English(entries written/published in another language and accompanied by an English translation will be accepted)
  • One digital copy of the essay should be emailed to the Design History Society administrator, [email protected], by 16.00 GMT on 15 June 2019. The email subject line should clearly state “DHS Writing Prize” 
  • The essay must be accompanied by an academic nomination and Application Entry Form. These are available via the DHS webpage. Note: submissions can be either self-nominated or put forward by a nominator. It is the responsibility of the nominator to ensure the entry criteria is met and the author is aware of the submission. The Entry Form must be included with the submission bearing the signature of both the author and a nominator and a brief statement that contextualizes the entry.
  • Essays must be submitted as PDF files with the accompanying entry form either included within or alongside the PDF in the submission email. 
  • Consideration should be given to the following selection criteria:

1. Originality: The entry should demonstrate a novel approach to issues, themes, and discourses currently relevant to design history and related fields and should further work in and understanding of its subject-matter.

2. Method: The essay should demonstrate excellence in writing practice through the selection or tone, mode of communication appropriate for its audience (interview, review, essay etc.), position and delivery of an argument. While methods of research and delivery should reflect good practice in design history, unconventional or experimental approaches to design writing history are encouraged. 

3. Criticality: Competence in questioning the entry’s subject material and engaging incorporated resources, discourses and methods should be present and coherent. Submissions should surpass description of their material and demonstrate an ability to critically engage in their subject to further an argument.

4. Presentation: Entries must be well-structured, well-written and presented to a high standard. Where appropriate, they should include appropriate citations (footnotes or endnotes) and bibliography. The language of this competition is English, however entries written in another language with provided translations will be accepted.