Skepticism About Single-Winner Prizes

by Richard Kostelanetz (June 2015)

My opinion of the practice of giving a medal to any poet over the age of ten is not high.
— Northrop Frye, The Bush Garden (1971)

Anyone who has ever critically examined the published list of any single-winner writers’ competition, even the most famous Nobel Literary Prize, questions the judges’ judgment. For sample runs of a strictly American example, let’s look at the recipients of the Pulitzer Prize in Poetry between 1970 and 1980:

Selected Poems by Donald Justice, The Morning of the Poem by James Schuyler, The Collected Poems by Sylvia Plath, Selected Poems by Galway Kinnell, American Primitive by Mary Oliver, Yin by Carolyn Kizer, The Flying Change by Henry S. Taylor, Thomas and Beulah by Rita Dove, Partial Accounts: New and Selected Poems by William Meredith1989, New and Collected Poems by Richard Wilbur

Here are the poetry Pulitzers from the next decade, yet closer to us now:

Charles Simic, Near Changes by Mona Van Duyn, Selected Poems by James Tate, The Wild Iris by Louise Glück, Neon Vernacular: New and Selected Poems by Yusef Komunyakaa, The Simple Truth by Philip Levine, The Dream of the Unified Field by Jorie Graham, Alive Together: New and Selected Poems by Lisel Mueller, Black Zodiac by Charles Wright1999, Blizzard of One by Mark Strand

About these books and these poets too would most of us draw similar skeptical conclusions.

Some years ago, I published the list of another kind of single winner, the current states’ poets laureate, and it was even more embarrassing—indeed, so embarrassing that I ventured that were all the poets gathered within a single room, most would walk out disgusted about the others.

About lesser literary prizes, as about single book competitions sponsored nowadays by too many literary magazines, most of us would likewise conclude, simply: These books/poets were not the best.

The problem appears to be intrinsic in the process of needing to choose one and only one from a large pool. Competition sponsors often hire some initial gatekeepers, called “screeners,” to pick finalists from a large pool of applicants, thus circumscribing the pool from which the eventual winner is selected. Ultimate judges have been known to find all these screeners’ recommendations unacceptable and thus cast about for a winner who wasn’t offered them. Legend has it that W. H. Auden, entirely disliking the finalists offered to him, disregarded their authority and wholly on his own initiative chose John Ashbery to be the Yale Younger Poet in 1956.

Lest anyone rank Auden a superior sole judge, consider that during his reign at the Yale University Press the winners immediately before Ashbery were, in sequence, Daniel Hoffman, Edgar Bogardus, W. S. Merwin, Adrienne Rich, Rosalie Moore, Robert Horan, and Joan Murray. While their names were public then, what is not known is the names of the other aspiring poets who had applied between 1947 and 1956. The best reason for keeping these names secret, then as well as now, is that they probably include poets whom skeptics might now judge superior to Yale’s winners.

For prizes with only a single judge the greater the likelihood of a compromising connection, often easily uncovered, between him or her and the winner, sometimes to an embarrassing degree. In any case the hidden truth is this: With single-winner competitions, always there is “a story” that has only a tangential relationship to quality.

Moving out of literature into sports, I then considered the list of winners of the most prestitious award offered to one collegiate football player—the Heisman Prize that is so well publicized that ESPN can produce an hour-long program with the likely candidates who learn their fate live at the 58th minute.

2001

Eric Crouch</a>;

 

 

 

2002

Carson Palmer</a>;

 

 

2003

Jason White</a>;

 

 

2004

Matt Leinart</a>;

 

 

2006

Troy Smith</a>;

 

 

2007

Tim Tebow

 

 

2008

Sam Bradford

 

 

2009

Mark Ingram

 

 

2010

Cam Newton

 

 

Whatever the stories might be accounting for why each guy was chosen over others I’ve no idea beyond the assumption that some “story” there must have been. As a mechanism for predicting future football greatness, the Heisman Prize had an imperfect batting average—indeed, perhaps worse than any of the literary prizes. Did I in the course of examining literary prizes discover a more general truth about single recipient?

First published in Small Press Review.

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