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Academic prize
The Lange-Taylor Prize (or Dorothea Lange–Paul Taylor Prize ) is a prize awarded annually since 1990 by the
Center for Documentary Studies at
Duke University , Durham, NC, to encourage collaboration between documentary writers and
photographers .
[1]
[2] The prize, that has variously been $10,000 and $20,000 (USD), is named after photographer
Dorothea Lange and her husband, writer
Paul Schuster Taylor . It has been awarded since 1990.
Winners
1991:
Keith Carter
[3]
1992:
Gray Brechin and
Robert Dawson
[4]
1993: Donna DeCesare and
Luis J. Rodriguez for Mara Salvatrucha – An exploration of the lives of the young men and women in Salvadoran street gangs.
1994:
1995:
1996: Mary Berridge and River Huston for Women – Visual and verbal portraits of HIV-positive women and their families.
1997:
Ernesto Bazan and
Silvana Paternostro for El Periodo Especial – Life in Cuba since the collapse of the Soviet Union.
1998:
Rob Amberg and Sam Gray for I-26: Corridor of Change – the physical, economic, and social changes accompanying highway construction in remote Appalachia.
1999:
Jason Eskenazi and Jennifer Gould Keil
[5] for Mountain Jews: A Lost Tribe – the transition of a centuries-old village in the Caucasus from its traditional way of life.
2000:
2001:
2002:
2003: Misty Keasler and
Charles D'Ambrosio .
[6]
2004: Katherine Dunn and Jim Lommasson.
[7]
2005:
Kent Haruf and Peter Brown.
[8]
2006:
Donald Weber and Larry Frolick.
[9]
2007: Kurt Pitzer and Roger LeMoyne.
[10]
2008: Ilan Greenberg and
Carolyn Drake for Becoming Chinese: Uighurs in Cultural Transition .
[11]
2009: Teru Kuwayama and
Christian Parenti .
[12]
2010: Tiana Markova-Gold and Sarah Dohrmann.
[13]
2013: Jen Kinney.
[14]
2014:
Jon Lowenstein .
[15]
2015: Michel Huneault Post Mégantic
[16]
[17]
[18]
2016: Steven M. Cozart for The Pass/Fail Series
[19]
2017: Katherine Yungmee Kim for Severence
[20]
2018: Daniel Ramos for The Land of Illustrious Men
[21]
2019: Chinen Aimi for Finding Ryukyu
[22]
2020:
Tarrah Krajnak for El Jardín De Senderos Que Se Bifurcan
[23]
2021: V Haddad and Sam Richardson for Self Portrait Service
[24]
References
^ Laurent, Olivier (2015). "Better Together".
Huck . No. 52. TCOLondon Publishing. pp. 12–17.
^
"Dorothea Lange–Paul Taylor Prize overview" .
Center for Documentary Studies ,
Duke University .
^
"Museum of Contemporary Photography" . www.mocp.org . Retrieved 2019-02-12 .
^ Houston, James D. (April 18, 1999).
"A Sorry State: Award-winning team documents the cost of California's prosperity" .
San Francisco Chronicle . Retrieved July 5, 2022 .
^
"Guide to the Dorothea Lange-Paul Taylor Prize Photography Collection, 1996-2005" . David M. Rubenstein Rare Book & Manuscript Library . Retrieved 2019-02-12 .
^
"2003 Winners: Misty Keasler and Charles D'Ambrosio" . Duke University. Archived from
the original on 18 January 2015. Retrieved 8 December 2014 .
^
"2004 Winners: Katherine Dunn and Jim Lommasson" . Duke University. Retrieved 1 June 2018 .
^
"2005 Winners: Kent Haruf and Peter Brown" . Duke University. Retrieved 1 June 2018 .
^
"2006 Winners: Larry Frolick and Donald Weber" . Duke University. Retrieved 1 June 2018 .
^
"2007 Winners: Kurt Pitzer and Roger LeMoyne" . Duke University. Retrieved 1 June 2018 .
^
"2008 Winners: Ilan Greenberg and Carolyn Drake" . Duke University. Retrieved 1 June 2018 .
^
"2009 Winners: Teru Kuwayama and Christian Parenti" . Duke University. Retrieved 1 June 2018 .
^
"2010 Winners: Tiana Markova-Gold and Sarah Dohrmann" . Duke University. Retrieved 1 June 2018 .
^
"2013 Winner: Jen Kinney" . Duke University. Retrieved 1 June 2018 .
^
"2014 Winner: Jon Lowenstein" . Duke University. Retrieved 1 June 2018 .
^ De Stefani, Lucia (21 September 2015).
"Michel Huneault Wins Dorothea Lange–Paul Taylor Photo Prize" .
Time . Retrieved 3 November 2015 .
^ Risch, Conor (21 September 2015).
"$10K Lange–Taylor Prize Goes to Michel Huneault for Project About Oil Train Disaster" .
Photo District News . Retrieved 3 November 2015 .
^
"2015 Prizewinner: Michel Huneault" .
Duke University . Retrieved 1 June 2018 .
^ "
2016 Lange-Taylor Prize:Steven M. Cozart, "The Pass/Fail Series" ", Duke University. Accessed 28 November 2017.
^
"2017 Prizewinner: Katherine Yungmee Kim" . Duke University. Retrieved 1 June 2018 .
^
Taylor Prize Daniel Ramos Land Illustrious Men [
dead link ]
^
Taylor Prize Chinen Aimi Finding Ryukyu [
dead link ]
^
https://documentarystudies.duke.edu/projects/2020-lange-taylor-prize-tarrah-krajnak-el-jard%C3%ADn-de-senderos-que-se-bifurcan
^
"2021 Lange-Taylor Prize: V Haddad and Sam Richardson, Self Portrait Service | Center for Documentary Studies at Duke University" .
External links