Harvard Alumni and Faculty Win Six Pulitzer Prizes

Winners include Jill Lepore, Bess Wohl, Pablo Torre, and Hannah Natanson.

An illustration depicting the different categories of Pulitzer Prizes

Five Harvard alumni won Pulitzer Prizes on Monday across a range of disciplines. | montage illustration by niko yaitanes / harvard magazine; images by adobe stock

On Monday, six Harvard alumni and faculty members won Pulitzer Prizes for work that encompasses American history, the Trump administration, sports investigations, and the story of a Texas city as told through its architecture.

Jill Lepore, the Kemper professor of American history and a professor of law, was honored for We the People: A History of the U.S. Constitution, a sweeping exploration of the amendment process. As she writes in the book, it is also “a deep historical critique of originalism,” the legal theory that now dominates the U.S. Supreme Court—a body whose exclusive control over constitutional interpretation she also disputes. Examining why amending the Constitution has become a near-impossible task, Lepore warns that without the ability to alter and renew the nation’s founding document, the risk of political violence rises, and so does the risk of change by presidential or judicial fiat.

Author Amanda Vaill ’70 received the prize in biography for Pride and Pleasure: The Schuyler Sisters in an Age of Revolution. The book follows Angelica and Elizabeth Schuyler, aristocratic sisters from the colonial Hudson Valley, who became entangled in the American Revolution. Angelica married a war profiteer (whom her father once labeled a “noxious beetle”) and socialized with luminaries including Benjamin Franklin and Thomas Jefferson. Elizabeth married then-penniless Alexander Hamilton, later a founder of the new nation and its first treasury secretary. Through historical narrative and family drama, the book muses on the role of women in this extraordinary historical moment. Vaill studied English literature at Radcliffe College.

The prize winner in drama, playwright Bess Wohl ’96, was honored for work examining a different kind of American revolution. Mixing sharp comedy and heartfelt sincerity, Wohl’s play, Liberation, looks back at the second-wave feminism of the 1970s through the lens of a women’s liberation group in Ohio. The plot was inspired by Wohl’s own mother, an activist who worked at at Ms. magazine. During research for the play, Wohl interviewed numerous women who were part of the movement. (On Tuesday, Liberation was nominated for five Tony Awards as well, including best play.)

Sports journalist Pablo Torre ’07 and the entire staff of his podcast, Pablo Torre Finds Out, won the Pulitzer Prize in audio reporting for their investigation into an alleged violation of the NBA salary cap by the Los Angeles Clippers. Torre and his colleagues documented how the team paid star player Kawhi Leonard millions more than league rules allowed by funneling money through an endorsement deal with a California-based environmental startup. After Torre’s series aired, the NBA opened an official investigation, which is ongoing.

Dallas Morning News architecture critic Mark Lamster, who since 2023 has been a visiting lecturer at the Harvard Graduate School of Design (GSD), was honored for a series of impassioned and biting columns scrutinizing some of Dallas’s most significant structures and sites. His pieces tell the history of the city and also argue for his vision of its future. Lamster was a Loeb fellow at the GSD in 2017.

In addition, Hannah Natanson ’19 was part of the Washington Post reporting team that won the Pulitzer Prize in public service, for a series of articles exposing the devastating effects of the Trump administration’s “chaotic overhaul of federal agencies and chronicling in rich detail the human impacts of the cuts and the consequences for the country,” in the words of the Pulitzer Prize committee. Natanson’s reporting anchored the series, and the final entry in the prize-winning package was her first-person account of being the newspaper’s “federal government whisperer,” on the receiving end of thousands of phone calls and messages from desperate federal workers who confided in her with their stories. In January, after the series was published, the FBI searched Natanson’s home. 

Read more articles by Lydialyle Gibson

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