Calling All Dissertation Survivors (2024)!

The Joan Pavelich CASDW Annual Award for the Best Dissertation in Writing and Discourse Studies recognizes an outstanding PhD dissertation in Writing Studies, Discourse Studies, Rhetoric, or a cognate field for 2024. The award will be given to a student in a Canadian university or to a Canadian student studying outside Canada. To be eligible, dissertations must have been defended between January 1, 2024 and December 31, 2024. An announcement of the winning dissertation will be made at the CASDW Annual Conference. Nominees do not need to be CASDW members, and self-nominations are accepted.

The award includes a prize of $100 and a one-year free CASDW membership for the following year.

The deadline for nominations is March 17, 2025.

The assessment criteria for the award are as follows: (1) the overall quality of the writing and thinking; (2) the significance of the question(s) addressed in the research; (3) the importance of the new knowledge presented in the thesis; and (3) and methodological rigour and/or innovation.

Applicants/nominators should send the following items to each member of the selection committee listed below: a PDF file containing the dissertation (or a link to an online repository), and a cover sheet with the applicant’s full name, citizenship, institution and degree program, and contact information for their primary supervisor.

Call for Nominations: 2025 Doreen Starke-Meyerring Award for Best Article or Chapter in Writing & Discourse Studies

Nominations are now being accepted for the 2025 Doreen Starke-Meyerring Annual Award for the best article or chapter in writing and discourse studies. This award celebrates the outstanding scholarship being produced within the Canadian writing and discourse studies community.

The Doreen Starke-Meyerring Annual Award recognizes the best journal article or book chapter published during the calendar year by a CASDW member. Co-authored articles or chapters will be eligible as long as one of the authors is a CASDW member.

In order to be eligible, nominees must have been CASDW members in 2024. In the case of co-authored pieces, at least one member must have been a CASDW member in 2024. The nominated article or chapter must have been published in 2024.

To nominate an article or chapter, send a PDF of the journal article or book chapter and a complete reference to the Chair of the selection committee (shumphreys (at) uvic.ca). No other documents needed!

The deadline for nominations is March 10, 2025.

The winner of the award will be announced at the CASDW Annual Conference.  Authors are invited to nominate their own publications as well as those of other CASDW members.

The assessment criteria for the award are as follows:

(1) the overall quality of the writing and thinking

(2) the significance of the question(s) addressed in the research;

(3) the importance of the new knowledge presented in the article and

(4) methodological approach and/or innovation.

The award includes a one-year CASDW membership for the following year.

2024 Joan Pavelich CASDW/ACR Annual Award for the Best Dissertation in Writing and Discourse Studies

The committee for the 2024 Joan Pavelich CASDW/ACR Annual Award for the Best Dissertation in Writing and Discourse Studies is delighted to present this award to Dr. Brittany Amell. Dr. Amell’s doctoral thesis—titled “Not all who want to, can—not all who can, will: Extending notions of unconventional doctoral dissertations”—presents a significant contribution to conversations in rhetorical genre theory, applied linguistics, and the study of disciplinary discourse.

In this complex project, Dr. Amell explores the diverse experiences and discursive choices of an international set of doctoral students and their unconventional dissertations. Dr. Amell’s work is firmly rooted in and thoroughly informed by current writing and discourse studies scholarship. With clarity and care, her insights both extend and challenge current approaches as she applies textography as a method, conducts interviews, collects questionnaire responses, and analyzes a significant and diverse corpus of dissertations. This research, rich in contextual detail, allows us to see how shifts in disciplinary setting as well as newly motivating values can turn what might otherwise appear to be conventional into an unconventional project as well as how the multiple negotiations that doctoral students need to engage in continue to constrain formal experimentation. Underlying Dr. Amell’s genre-theoretical analysis is a significant concern for both making doctoral scholarship more publicly accessible and creating more equitable conditions to better support marginalized scholars. This work questions the types of writing that are considered to belong in the university and challenges the status quo of which type of work gets legitimized. Throughout this dissertation, Dr. Amell is exceptionally adept at reflecting on and narrating her research process, describing the challenges of definition she encountered, and attending to the positions and intentions of her research participants. The committee strongly encourages the pursuit of further forms and versions of publication of this thorough and insightful work.

The committee chair, Dr. Katja Thieme, wishes to thank the committee members for their careful work: Nazih El-Bezre, Alys Avalos-Rivera, and Leah Burns. Finally, a wide call to the audience. Please keep this prize on your mind as you encounter doctoral students in any Canadian university or Canadian students studying outside Canada who are completing a dissertation in writing and discourse studies and may be finishing in the upcoming year. Please nominate them next year or encourage them to nominate themselves.”