Gerda Blumenthal Phi Beta Kappa Grant

The Gerda Blumenthal Phi Beta Kappa Grant is awarded annually to a current first- or second-year student to support special scholarly work in the humanities.

 

Blumenthal Information 2024

 

About the Grant

The Gerda Blumenthal Phi Beta Kappa Grant is awarded annually to one or more first- or second-year students to cover travel and other costs in support of research projects in the humanities. Grant amounts for successful applications will correspond to the project budget presented, up to $5000 per recipient. The project can be part of an established Washington College research trip or learning experience, but this is not a requirement. It should involve significant original research, and will often lead toward the student’s Senior Capstone Experience. Recipients will later do brief presentations on their completed projects.

This grant is made possible by a gift from Dr. Robert Kirkwood, former Dean of the College, who established the prize as a way to honor the memory of Dr. Gerda Blumenthal, a former Professor of Modern Languages at Washington College and member of Phi Beta Kappa (Hunter College, 1945). She has been described by Dr. Thomas Pabon, Professor of Spanish Emeritus, as “a great teacher, a luminary who had a major impact on a lot of students.” This grant carries on Dr. Blumenthal’s legacy by supporting students in their pursuit of intellectual excellence.

Dr. Blumenthal was born in Berlin and immigrated to the US with her family in 1939. She studied at Hunter College, where she became a member of Phi Beta Kappa. She later earned a Master’s degree and a PhD from Columbia University. Dr. Blumenthal began teaching World Literature and French at Washington College in 1955 and later served as chair of the Department of Modern Languages. At the College, she earned a reputation as an excellent and inspiring teacher and received the first Lindback Award for Distinguished Teaching in 1964. She continued her teaching career as Professor of French and Comparative Literature at Catholic University before retiring in 1988. Dr. Blumenthal passed away in 2004 at the age of 80.

An expert in twentieth-century French literature, Dr. Blumenthal published several articles and three critically-acclaimed books: André Malraux: The Conquest of Dread (1960) and The Poetic Imagination of Georges Bernanos (1965) and Thresholds: A Study of Proust (1984).

Recent Grant Recipients:

  • From sea shanties and Neil Young to Batá drumming, Jordana Qi ’18 is following a musical path of her own composition. The journey of a young woman with epilepsy includes an internship at the Smithsonian Center for Folklife and Cultural Heritage and an upcoming gig with a troupe of actors with disabilities in Colorado.

     

  • Barbara MacGuigan ’18 finds inspiration for her own writing in Navajo folklore.