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Lange Taylor Prize

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The Lange-Taylor Prize (or Dorothea Lange–Paul Taylor Prize) is a prize awarded annually by the Center for Documentary Studies at Duke University, Durham, NC, to encourage collaboration between documentary writers and photographers. 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.

Recipients

  • 2003: Misty Keasler and Charles D'Ambrosio.
  • 2004: Katherine Dunn and Jim Lommasson.
  • 2005: Kent Haruf and Peter Brown.
  • 2006: Donald Weber and Larry Frolick.
  • 2007: Kurt Pitzer and Roger LeMoyne.
  • 2008: Ilan Greenberg and Carolyn Drake for Becoming Chinese: Uighurs in Cultural Transition.
  • 2009: Teru Kuwayama and Christian Parenti.
  • 2010: Tiana Markova-Gold and Sarah Dohrmann.
  • 2013: Jen Kinney.
  • 2014: Jon Lowenstein.
  • 2015: Michel Huneault awarded the $10,000 prize for Post Mégantic. Honorable Mention awarded to Alice Leora Briggs and Julián Cardona for Abecedario de Juárez. Special Recognition awarded to Serge J-F. Levy for The Fire in the Freezer. The other finalists were JT Blatty; Kitra Cahana; Sarah Christianson and Sierra Crane Murdoch; Megan E. Doherty; Jess Dugan and Vanessa Fabbre, Justin Maxon; Brittany M. Powell; Rylan Steele and Nora Wendl; Byron Wolfe, Mark Klett, and Rebecca Solnit.
  • References

    Lange-Taylor Prize Wikipedia


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