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Jerry Baum Award
The Jerry Baum Award was established in 2007 by the Department of English, alumni, family, and friends to honor the memory of beloved professor of English R. Jerold (Jerry) Baum. Recipient is a senior whose senior seminar paper addresses the relationship between literature and history and is recognized as outstanding by the English faculty. A monetary prize accompanies the award.
Previous Winners
2025 Evan Doi, “Separating the Maid from Her Lady: Mademoiselle Hortense’s Other Double”
2024 Tim Stolp, “Matching Strangeness: Interracial Connection in Kindred .’”
2023 Aubrey Roché, “Undiscovered Countries: New Zealand as a Language for Modernist Innovation and Childhood Linguistic Development in Katherine Mansfield’s Prelude and At the Bay”
2022 Ailish Duff, “Against the Grene : A Critical Reimagining of Color in Sir Gawain and the Green Knight”
2021 Julianna Volta, “The Art of Collaboration”
2020 Bryan Miller, “One Man in a Century: Nabokov’s Struggles Against History in Bend Sinister and Speak, Memory”
2019 Brendan Nagle, “A Dead World and an Immortal Fish: Virginia Woolf, Montage, and Temporal Collapse”
2018 Eva Gellman, “The Unknown World: Examining Attempts to Claim the Past as Our Own in Edward P. Jones’s The Known World”
2017 Jess Kostka, “Choice and Decision-Making in The Age of Innocence and The Portrait of a Lady”
2016 Deirdre Collins, “The Confessions of Linda Brent, in /Incidents
in the Life of a Slave Girl/, by Harriet Jacobs”
2015 Zane Pais, “Hello Darkness My Old Friend: Mystic Dionysian Implications in St. Erkenwald and Patience”
2014 Marly Williams, “My Solitary Condition: Isolation and the Myth of Reform in Robinson Crusoe”
2013 Heather Spurling, “Patrilineal Preeminence in Absalom, Absalom!”
2012 Claire Burdick, ”‘A Poet’s Epitaph’: Wordsworth’s Epitaphic Poetics”
2011 Riley Johnson, “Solution, Epiphany, and Physical/Metaphysical Unity in the Novels of Vladimir Nabokov”
2009 Charles Macquarie, “The Self that Springs from the Shadows: Irresponsibility, Lighting, and the Redefinition of Selfhood in Virginia Woolf’s ‘Streethaunting’
2008 Alice Waarvick, “Desire Gratified: Method and Female Liberation in Blake’s Visions of the Daughters of Albion”
English is located in Miller Center on the Undergraduate Campus.
MSC: 58
email english@lclark.edu
voice 503-768-7405
fax 503-768-7418
Chair Kristin Fujie
Administrative Coordinator Amy Baskin
English
Lewis & Clark
615 S. Palatine Hill Road
Portland OR 97219