Our Student Prize-winners

Our Student Prize-winners

Congratulations to the winners of The Nation‘s sixth annual Student Writing Contest.

Facebook
Twitter
Email
Flipboard
Pocket

We’re delighted to announce the winners of The Nation’s sixth annual Student Writing Contest. This year we asked students to send us an original, unpublished 800-word essay detailing what they think is the most important issue facing their generation. We received close to 1,000 submissions from high school and college students in forty-one states. We chose one college and one high school winner and ten finalists.

Congratulations to the winners, Bryce Wilson Stucki, from Virginia Tech University, and Hannah Moon, a 2011 graduate of Brooklyn College Academy in Brooklyn, New York, and to our ten finalists. Each winner will receive $1,000; the finalists will receive $200. All will receive Nation subscriptions.

Stucki’s essay movingly details the horrific mass murder of students at Virginia Tech from a personal perspective: “Some days it does seem like the shooting is just another catastrophe in a long line of catastrophes, albeit with a more personal tinge. Iraq, Afghanistan, Katrina, the Towers? I sometimes think we log so many hours on Facebook just so we don’t have to deal with the bad news we are perpetually bombarded with….

“But a catastrophe is different when it is personal; it is easy to numb yourself when death is anonymous. But when a sweet, straw-headed girl from your dorm, whom you know, is shot just because she was around, you are forced to deal with it. When fear is no longer abstract, it is no longer possible to deal with it abstractly, no matter how long it takes.”

Moon eyes the recession with keen powers of observation: “I take the bus to school, and I witness the most alarming and heart-wrenching scene, which leaves me asking myself, ‘Is the economy that bad?’ There is an employment agency right next to one of the bus stops we pass, and most days I saw a long, meandering line in front of that building. I saw them through the harsh winter snowstorms, waiting in front of that door, and I saw them through the scorching summer mornings, waiting in front of that door—that door that may lead them to the help they need to pay for the next phone bill, gas bills, rent.”

Read all the essays here.

Thank you for reading The Nation!

We hope you enjoyed the story you just read, just one of the many incisive, deeply-reported articles we publish daily. Now more than ever, we need fearless journalism that shifts the needle on important issues, uncovers malfeasance and corruption, and uplifts voices and perspectives that often go unheard in mainstream media.

Throughout this critical election year and a time of media austerity and renewed campus activism and rising labor organizing, independent journalism that gets to the heart of the matter is more critical than ever before. Donate right now and help us hold the powerful accountable, shine a light on issues that would otherwise be swept under the rug, and build a more just and equitable future.

For nearly 160 years, The Nation has stood for truth, justice, and moral clarity. As a reader-supported publication, we are not beholden to the whims of advertisers or a corporate owner. But it does take financial resources to report on stories that may take weeks or months to properly investigate, thoroughly edit and fact-check articles, and get our stories into the hands of readers.

Donate today and stand with us for a better future. Thank you for being a supporter of independent journalism.

Thank you for your generosity.

Ad Policy
x