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Pulitzer Prizes

Award Name
Pulitzer Prizes
Foundation Date
1917
Founder
Joseph Pulitzer
Management
Columbia UniversityPulitzer Prize Board
Categories
14 Journalism6 Literature1 Music (Total 21)
Initial Awards
4 Journalism4 Literature and Theater1 Education4 Travel Fellowships
Current Categories
Public ServiceInvestigative ReportingFeature PhotographyFictionBiographyHistoryGeneral NonfictionPoetryTheaterMusic
Important Changes
Online journalism (1999)Expansion of the music category (1998)Digital submission system (2012)
Important Awards
Wynton Marsalis (1997)Ornette Coleman (2007)Kendrick Lamar (2018)
Special Awards
George Gershwin (1998)Duke Ellington (1999)Thelonious Monk (2006)John Coltrane (2007)Aretha Franklin (2019)
Discussions
Edward Albee (1963)Ernest Hemingway (1941)Tony Kushner (1993)
Announcement
Each year in April or May
Funding
Joseph Pulitzer's donation of two million dollars to Columbia University

The Pulitzer Prizes are prestigious awards conferred annually by Columbia University to honor outstanding achievements in journalism, literature, and music in the United States. Established through the 1904 will of newspaper publisher Joseph Pulitzer, the prizes have been regularly awarded since 1917.


Pulitzer Prize (The Pulitzer)

Joseph Pulitzer and the Establishment of the Prizes

Joseph Pulitzer was one of the leading figures in American journalism at the end of the 19th century. Of Hungarian descent, Pulitzer reshaped newspaper publishing through the New York World and the St. Louis Post-Dispatch, fought against corrupt administrations, and gained competitive advantage through sensational reporting. Pulitzer championed the professionalization of journalism and was among the first to advocate for university-level journalism education. In his 1904 will, he stipulated the creation of the Pulitzer Prizes to encourage excellence in journalism, literature, theater, and education. The will also bequeathed two million dollars to Columbia University to establish a School of Journalism, with one quarter of the funds designated for prizes and scholarships.


Pulitzer’s will defined four journalism prizes (public service, editorials, reporting, and journalistic history), four literature and theater prizes (American novel, American drama, U.S. history book, and American biography), one education prize, and four travel fellowships. However, sensitive to societal change, Pulitzer granted broad authority to an advisory board to oversee the prizes. This board could suspend, modify, or add new categories and retained the right to withhold awards when works failed to meet quality standards. Beginning in 1917, the prizes expanded under the management of the Pulitzer Prize Board (formerly the Advisory Board) to 23 categories, incorporating fields such as poetry, music, photography, memoir, and audio journalism.

Prize Categories and Evolution

The Pulitzer Prizes began with a limited number of categories but expanded over time in parallel with social and technological developments. Today, the prizes are awarded across 21 categories: 14 in journalism, 6 in literature, and 1 in music, along with fellowships known as “fellowships.” Journalism categories include public service, investigative reporting, feature photography, and editorials; literature categories encompass fiction, biography, history, general nonfiction, poetry, and drama. The music prize, added in 1943, originally recognized only classical compositions but was redefined in 1998 to encompass a broader spectrum of American music.


Key turning points marked the evolution of the prizes. In 1997, on the 150th anniversary of Pulitzer’s birth, the rise of online journalism was formally recognized, and beginning with the 1999 competition, online submissions were permitted alongside print entries in the public service category. In 2006, online content was accepted in all journalism categories; in 2009, only online news organizations were eligible to compete; and in 2012, a fully digital submission and evaluation system was adopted. In 2016, both print and digital magazines became eligible for consideration. In music, Wynton Marsalis’s “Blood on the Fields,” which incorporated jazz elements, won the prize in 1997, marking the first time the award extended beyond classical music. In 2007, Ornette Coleman’s live jazz recording “Sound Grammar” received the prize, and in 2018, Kendrick Lamar became the first hip-hop artist to win. Special awards have also been conferred posthumously to figures such as George Gershwin (1998), Duke Ellington (1999), Thelonious Monk (2006), John Coltrane (2007), Hank Williams (2010), and Aretha Franklin (2019).

Administration and Evaluation Process

The Pulitzer Prizes are administered by Columbia University, with final decisions made by an independent Pulitzer Prize Board. The board consists of judges appointed by Columbia University and evaluates recommendations from juries established for each category. Pulitzer’s will explicitly grants the board the authority to reject jury recommendations or withhold awards. The prizes are announced each year in April or May, and the president of Columbia University formally presents them on the board’s recommendation.


The evaluation process adheres strictly to standards of excellence. The board has consistently avoided trends in popular culture and often honored works outside the mainstream. For instance, most prize-winning books have not appeared on bestseller lists, and theater prizes have frequently gone to plays staged outside Broadway or in regional theaters. In journalism, major newspapers such as The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, and The Washington Post have won numerous awards, but smaller and lesser-known publications have also been frequently recognized. For example, The Virgin Islands Daily News won the public service prize in 1995, Willamette Week received the investigative reporting prize in 2005, and the Bristol Herald Courier won the public service prize in 2010.

Controversies and Criticisms

The Pulitzer Prizes have occasionally sparked controversy due to their subjective nature. The board’s decisions to reject jury recommendations or withhold awards have drawn criticism. For instance, in 1963, the drama jury recommended Edward Albee’s “Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf?” but the board declined to award it, deeming it “not sufficiently uplifting.” In 1993, Tony Kushner’s play “Angels in America: Millennium Approaches,” which addressed AIDS and homosexuality, won the prize, signaling a more liberal stance by the board on matters of taste. In 1941, Ernest Hemingway’s “For Whom the Bell Tolls” was rejected for the fiction prize, but he later won in 1953 for “The Old Man and the Sea.”


The board has maintained confidentiality in its decision-making process and refuses to publicly debate its choices. This approach has preserved the prestige of the prizes but has been criticized by some as lacking transparency. Nevertheless, the Pulitzer Prizes are widely regarded as the most prestigious awards in America and are recognized globally as a symbol of excellence in journalism, literature, and music.

Social Impact and Significance

The Pulitzer Prizes have played a vital role in promoting excellence in American journalism, literature, and music. In journalism, the prizes have encouraged high standards in public service, investigative reporting, and social responsibility. In literature, recognition of non-mainstream works has highlighted the diversity and depth of American literature. The music category, encompassing everything from classical to jazz and hip-hop, reflects the richness of American musical culture.


The prizes have also contributed to the professionalization of journalism. Pulitzer’s vision of establishing a School of Journalism at Columbia University helped institutionalize journalism education. Columbia’s graduate journalism program, launched in 1912, promoted specialized training in the field. The prizes have served as an incentive to attract young journalists to the profession and to support the ethical and intellectual development of practicing journalists.

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AuthorYunus Emre SağlamDecember 9, 2025 at 5:58 AM

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Contents

  • Joseph Pulitzer and the Establishment of the Prizes

  • Prize Categories and Evolution

  • Administration and Evaluation Process

  • Controversies and Criticisms

  • Social Impact and Significance

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