Gene E. & Adele
R. Malott Prize for Recording Community Activism
The Gene E. and Adele R. Malott Prize for Recording Community
Activism recognizes biannually the best literary depiction of an
individual or small group of individuals whose efforts resulted in a
significant improvement of their local community. Although the work
of community improvement must be significant, the basis of the prize
will be the skill and power of the literary or film depiction.
Eligible media include books, magazine articles, series of newspaper
articles, or films, published or released within the past two years
of a prize cycle, e.g., published or released in 2007 or 2008 for
the prize awarded in 2009.
Prizes The prize for the writer, or in case of a film divided
between the director and screenwriter, is $1,500. If ongoing, the
underlying project of community activism will receive $1,000. The
winners are asked to attend an award ceremony, ideally held in the
community where the activism was accomplished, and a dinner honoring
them. The Trust defrays all travel and other expenses.
About Gene E. and Adele R. Malott and their
Prize Gene E. Malott (1933-1999) and Adele R. Malott (1935-2005)
created careers in print journalism, as reporters, editors, and
publishers of newspapers and magazines, winning many awards for
their endeavors. Later in their lives, they turned to travel
writing, making a niche in writing directed toward senior travelers.
Gene Malott received the prestigious La Pluma de Plata award, or
silver pen, from the Mexican government for his writing on Mexico,
and the members of the Society of American Travel Writers elected
Adele Malott as their president. Throughout most of their careers,
the Malotts lived in relatively small communities, San Mateo,
California; Little Falls, Minnesota; Reno, Nevada, and were keen
enthusiasts of their local issues and politics, as both reporters
and participants. Even in their later years when travel writing
required frequent international journeys, they remained, as they
were throughout their lives, devoted to and enthusiastic about the
communities in which they lived. Adele R. Malott established the
Malott Prize through a bequest to The Langum Charitable Trust, whose
founder and Director, David J. Langum, Sr., was a close friend of
the Malotts since the mid-1960s.
Adele Malott was convinced, in her words, that “at democracy’s
heart are people who find themselves agitating for change to make
things better, repair something that has broken down or create new
solutions for old problems. Such changes do not come easily. Nor
without pain and leadership.” Some examples include Erin Brockovich,
a file clerk in an attorney’s office who shook Pacific Gas &
Electric Company by the scruff of its neck and alerted Hinkley,
California to the carcinogenic pollutants the company was leaching
into the city’s water supply. Her successful efforts inspired the
popular 2000 film, Erin Brockovich. In this case, while Erin
Brockovich herself would not be eligible for the Malott Prize, the
movie would be. Another example would be the work of John Champion,
a machinist in Reno, Nevada, who found filth and pollution in the
local Truckee River, and trash and transients along its banks. His
agitation and personal example of cleanup drew media attention to
these conditions and sparked renewal projects significant enough
that the city named a park along the river in his honor. While
Champion’s efforts themselves would not be eligible for the Malott
Prize, a series of articles in the local media about his efforts
would be, and ongoing river projects would be eligible for the
supplemental award for the underlying project. The object of
community activism could range very broadly, from corrupt officials
to local crime, anything that is substantial and essentially located
within a community.
Adele Malott was most interested in grassroots activists. She was
fascinated by the motivation of quite ordinary people who “found
themselves in circumstances that pulled them out of the crowd and
caused them to speak up,” even as neighbors judged them busybodies
and politicians judged them troublemakers. She wrote that she wished
the prize-winning accounts to show us what made the activists move,
“what pushed him/her to get off the couch and spend hours at
countless meetings trying to be heard, trying to persuade people to
help pick up the load and move toward a solution. We should be
seeing things through this activist’s eyes.”
Deadlines and Submissions The deadline for materials published or released in 2007 is
January 1, 2008, and materials published or released in 2008 must be
submitted by January 1, 2009. This pattern will continue hereafter,
with materials published or produced in any given year due for
submission at the end of that year. We are asking for these
staggered submissions, even though the prize itself is biannual, so
that our selection committee can consider submissions on a rolling
basis. Please submit three copies of each book, magazine article, or
series of newspaper articles. We ask for three DVDs of films,
together with three transcripts. Send all submissions or questions
to us as shown on Contact page. We expect to announce the winners on
our website.