Past Distinction and Rossing Recipients
2009 - 10 Distinction & Rossing Award Recepient

Chance Voigt - Augustine, Ecofeminism, and Disease
My project, “Augustine, Ecofeminism, and Disease: Towards an Ecofeminist Theodicy of Natural Evil”, interrogates the ecofeminist Christian theologies of Sallie McFague, Rosemary Radford Ruether, and J. Michael Clark with the question – “if God is all-good and all-powerful, why do good people suffer from disease?” I argue that, although theodicy is not explicitly discussed at great lengths by these three theologians, their ecofeminist framework and larger theological ideas have great potential for the Christian journey of reconciling God’s love with the reality of disease. I offer the beginnings of a distinctly ecofeminist theodicy of natural evil and disease that offers comfort, meaning, and value to both human beings and the natural world.
2009 - 10 Viola Rossing Award

Margaret Shoemaker - Gender in Early Education
I visited elementary schools and observed how teachers influenced gender in the classroom. Teachers reinforce certain behaviors and I wanted to observe and interview the teachers to see if their personal beliefs about gender were expressed in their teaching methods. I also researched the history of how gender became an issue of debate in the education system and how it currently is included in the definition of 'diversity.

Sarah Tengblad - Entertaining Knowledge: Trends in Popular Women's Magazines 1910 - 1960
My paper was entitled "Entertaining Knowledge: Trends in Popular Women's Magazines 1910-1960." I surveyed and researched St. Olaf's archives of popular women's magazines (primarily Good Housekeeping) using four lenses. The first was a historical overview of women's publications during said time period and the following three sections included observations I made from the content of the magazines, titled "Women and Politics," "Women and Work," and "Women and Domesticity."

Katherine Nesbit - The Wedding Bell Blues: Interpreting Changing Trends in Common Perceptions of Marriage in Recent American History Through Young Women's Magazines
In Jan Hill's Intro to Women's Studies class, we were required to write a 4-6 page paper discussing trends in magazines from different historical periods that reflect changing attitudes about women in recent United States history. I focused on the portrayal of marriage and the "single woman" in young women's magazines within the last 60 or so years.

