ࡱ> [ n|bjbj Xjj&xElRRRR$,,,P-DX-l'M-20(*0*0*0<v<,<LLLLLLL$N QL<:l<<<L?RR*0*0 L???<XR8*0*0L?<L??DJXzL*0- E,-=*L(zL,L0'MRL(Q=8QzL?RRRR39993 For Your Information Volume 8 Issue 2 Spring 2003 Susan B. Anthony Institute for Gender and Women's Studies 91̳ Editor: Marilyn Lambert-Fisher, Program Manager, 538 Lattimore Hall, mslf@mail.rochester.edu  February 5 Research Seminar 12:30-2:00 p.m. Randall Halle, Department of 540 Lattimore Modern Languages and Cultures February 27 Research Seminar 12:30-2:00 p.m. Hal Gladfelder, Department of 540 Lattimore English "Plague Spots: Deviance and the Body in the Writings of John Cleland" February 28 Susan B. Anthony Institute for Gender 9:30 a.m. - and Womens Studies Tenth Annual 6:00 p.m. Interdisciplinary Graduate Conference March 19 Research Seminar 12:30-2:00 p.m. Rosemary Kegl, Department of 540 Lattimore English April 3 Research Seminar 12:30-2:00 p.m. Signithia Fordham, Susan B. Anthony 540 Lattimore Professor of Gender and Womens Studies and Department of Anthropology Topic: Race, Gender and Schooling April 11 Susan B. Anthony Institute Speaker 3:00 p.m. Meredith F. Small, Professor of Location TBA Anthropology, Cornell University "The Natural History of Babies" Co-Sponsored Events January 22 Naomi Greene, Professor Emeritus of 7:30 p.m. French and Film Studies, UC Santa Gamble Room, Barbara Wilson "Sal in the 21st Century" Commons On Saturday, January 18, 8:00 p.m., George Eastman House Dryden Theatre, 900 East Avenue is screening Sal, or the 120 Days of Sodom (Pier Paolo Pasolini, Italy 1975, 116 minutes, English subtitles) February 6 Susan B. Anthony Legacy Dinner 6:00 p.m. SBAI Associate Patricia May Room Herminghouse, Professor Emerita of Wilson German, will receive the Susan B. Commons Anthony Lifetime Achievement winner Ticket and other information at http://www.rochester.edu/SBA/ March 17- The Art of Kathleen McEnery, an April 26 exhibition Hartnett Gallery The show is curated by Janet Wolff Wilson (former SBAI Associate and Director) Commons who will give a talk on McEnerys work at the Memorial Art Gallery April 24th March 26 Rebecca L. Copeland, Associate 6:00 p.m. Professor of Japanese Language and Location TBA Literature, Washington University "Ladies Cinch Your Waists! On How a Nineteenth-Century Japanese Authoress Taught her Characters to Wear the Bustle Style and Then Reproved Them" See Also of Interest on page 7 for other event listings.  In spite of our late start in the Fall, the SBAI offered a full schedule of events last semester including outside speakers, faculty research seminars, and orientation events for undergraduate and graduate students. At the same time, our committees worked in full force planning future events and ensuring the proper organization and running of the Institute. As a community of scholars we welcomed and enthusiastically participated in faculty research seminars by Sharon Willis, Ayala Emmett, and Rachel Ablow. We also welcomed Diana Fuss as the SBAI visiting scholar. Our spring faculty research seminars promise to be just as exciting with presentations by Randall Halle (MLC), Rosemary Kegl (English), Hal Gladfelder (English), and Signithia Fordham (Anthropology). In addition, we have invited Meredith F. Small, Cornell University, as a SBAI speaker. As you know, the SBAI is undergoing a review this year. In conjunction with this review, we have been creating a database for the Institute that will allow us to keep track of various statistical data concerning teaching in the Institute, allocation of research grants, service to the Institute etc. from 1986 on. This database should be useful for the Institute in the years to come. I would like to take this opportunity to thank all of the steering committee members, committee members, and Associates who have been involved in the review of the SBAI. We have organized the review into 3 parts: 1) Mission and Structure, 2) Curricular Program, 3) Community of Faculty Scholars. The first of these three parts has been completed and is available to you in the SBAI. I would urge all interested SBAI Associates to review these materials. I believe that this review has already revealed the strong participation of Associates in the Institute--- demonstrating, for instance, that 55 Associates taught courses, 38 Associates served on committees, and 17 Associates gave research seminars between 1999 and 2003. Finally, I wish to thank Marilyn Lambert-Fisher and Amy Johnson for working so hard to complete the extra tasks demanded by the review process. Indeed, the Institute has been short-staffed as we have sought for a replacement for Amy. We are grateful that Amy has been able to help us throughout this transition. I am also happy to announce that we have hired Marty Collier and I hope you will all join me in welcoming him to the SBAI. Sue Gustafson  The Susan B. Anthony Institute is pleased to offer grants to faculty associates, graduate students, and undergraduates to support their research in gender and womens studies. Proposals may include such items as travel to professional conferences (in cases where the applicant is on the program), travel for research purposes, and expenses connected with research and course development. Check the Institute's website for "Frequently Asked Questions" about research grants (www.rochester.edu/college/wst/GRANT/grant.htm). Announcements are sent to those on the Institutes mailing list before each deadline. The spring semester deadlines are February 12 and April 24, 2003. We welcome information from Majors & Minors, Graduate Students, Faculty, and Alumni for the following sections. Please send information to the Institute.  Women's Studies curriculum director and undergraduate advisor Professor Joyce McDonough, Department of Linguistics, ( HYPERLINK "mailto:jmmcd@ling.rochester.edu" jmmcd@ling.rochester.edu, 275-2895, 505 Lattimore Hall) has office hours on Wednesdays by appointment. Lattimore 540 has space to study, or to meet with others, and a computer to access your email and word process. Stop in and check the room schedule. Of special interest: New Library Resource under Also of Interest on page 7, Conferences and Internships on pages 5-6. Read about work that womens studies alumni are doing on page 3-4 under Alumni Update. Spring 2003 Courses of Interest WST 100 Introduction to Womens Studies: Homosexuality in Film, Daniel Humphrey This course will span the history of world cinema in a survey of the portrayal of homosexuality and bisexuality in Hollywood, independent, and foreign films and straight, gay, and lesbian made movies. With a focus on homosexuality in film we willstudy the broader issues surrounding the cultural representation of human difference and specifically the motives and ethics behind those representations. (The name of this course on students' transcript will read "Introduction to Women's Studies.") For questions e-mail dihu@mail.rochester.edu WST 202F Women in Society, Susan B. Anthony Professor of Gender and Womens Studies Signithia Fordham This course examines the duality of women's lives: how they are subordinated in patriarchal systems--cross-culturally--and how they use indirect aggression to obtain power. Known as the new frontier in feminist studies, this desire for power is captured in the following phrase: "It's ok to be mean, if it's not seen." Because aggression (or anger) is constructed as an inappropriate female emotion (regardless of race or ethnicity), hiding or masking it is critical to the notion of female "perfection". Class participants will consider race and class variation and the gender-specific ways women respond to systemic subordination, including how they seek power through indirect aggression (or anger), competition and inter-group conflict in the context of that subordination. Ethnography and ethnographic techniques will enable student participants to interview at least three generations of women regarding their life histories. This Is A Women's Studies Foundation Course. Cluster: S1WST001 Gender and Social Issues WST 205F Philosophical Foundations of Feminism, Deborah Modrak The study of contemporary feminist theory considering the conception of women expressed through our practices, laws, theories and literature. Is this conception that of an inessential Other as one philosopher has argued? Other topics to be discussed include: equality and equal rights, sex roles and gender specific language, power relations and self-determination, marriage and maternity. This Is A Women's Studies Foundation Course. To fulfill requirement for WST 396 (upper level writing) register for WST 205W. Clusters: S1WST002 History and Theory of Feminism, S1WST004 Gender and Public Policy. WST 220 Urban Schools: Race and Gender, Susan B. Anthony Professor of Gender and Womens Studies Signithia Fordham America's public schooling is assumed to be a critical frontier in the eradication of social inequality. The one remaining obligatory institution in our nation, schools are socially approved sites specifically designed to produce a level playing field for all American citizens, by eliminating privileges and stigmata affiliated with race, class, gender and other socially and culturally constructed inequities. Using both ethnographic texts and the ideas of "outing" anthropology by bringing an informant to class, this course explores the dynamic relationship between schools and socially constructed notions of race, class and gender in postmodern America. More information about these and other interesting courses can be found at the Institute's web site, http://www.rochester.edu/college/wst or call the Institute at 275-8318. The Add/Drop deadline is February 11. Undergraduate Research Colloquium Faculty nominate students who have completed an excellent paper or project on a gender related topic to participate in the Womens Studies Undergraduate Research Colloquium. Students majoring in Womens Studies are required to discuss their internships and/or independent studies at the Colloquium, which takes place in the spring semester. The Colloquium is an opportunity for students to hear the experiences of other students, to ask questions and exchange ideas about gender related topics. More information will be forthcoming.  Graduate Certificate in Gender & Womens Studies The Susan B. Anthony Institute for Gender and Womens Studies offers a formal Graduate Certificate in Gender and Womens Studies for students who are enrolled in a graduate degree (Masters or Ph.D.) program at the 91̳ and for non-matriculated students who complete four or more courses from at least two 91̳ graduate programs. See requirements at  HYPERLINK "http://www.cc.rochester.edu:80/college/wst/grad.htm" www.cc.rochester.edu:80/college/wst/grad.htm Application deadline: March 5, 2003. Gender & Women's Studies Graduate Certificate Advisor: Professor Claudia Schaefer, Department of Modern Languages and Cultures ( HYPERLINK "mailto:csfr@mail.rochester.edu" csfr@mail.rochester.edu, 275-5569, 418 Lattimore Hall) Dissertation and Reading Groups The Susan B. Anthony Institute has two dissertation groups. If you are interested in starting a new dissertation or reading group, email  HYPERLINK "mailto:mslf@mail.rochester.edu" mslf@mail.rochester.edu. 2003-2004 Fellowships The competition for the 2003-2004 Teaching and Dissertation Fellowships will be announced soon. Graduate students affiliated with the Institute will receive information as soon as it is available. See New Library Resource under Also of Interest on page 7. News About Graduate Students Jackie Eddy, Department of History, successfully defended her dissertation, "Bookwomen: Creating an Empire in Children's Book Publishing, 1919-1939," in December. "We Have Become Too Tender-Hearted: Gender and the Language of Negotiation in the Public Library, 1880-1920" was reprinted in Libraries as Agencies of Culture, edited by. Wayne Wiegand and Thomas Augst, University of Wisconsin Press. It originally appeared in the American Studies Journal. Jackie Eddy was a 2001-2002 Susan B. Anthony Institute Dissertation Fellow. Mailing List Graduate students who are on the Institutes mailing list receive information about opportunities and events. If you would like to be added to the list, send your coordinates to mslf@mail.rochester.edu.  The Alumni Section includes news from alumni who were associated with the Institute as graduate students. Brie Blumenreich 02 has a position in the Development Department of the Memorial Art Gallery where she is responsible for coordinating gallery-sponsored events and receptions in addition to working with donors. Joe Lanning 00 is working on a master's degree in global history at the 91̳ in addition to working 25 hours a week as a recruiter for the Peace Corps for the 91̳-Buffalo area. The World Education Fund for Women is still his passion and was one of the sponsors for the volunteer trip he took with 7 undergraduate students, and others, to Malawi to work in rural schools over the winter break. The foundation was started by Joe to eliminate gender disparities in schools in the developing world. Carolyn Lee-Davis 95 reports the following. I finished my Masters in Public Administration and Policy in May of 2002, and gave birth to a beautiful baby girl in August. Her name is Zoe and I have enjoyed spending the last few months at home with her. Now I am job hunting for a position working in public policy and hope to be working as such before too long! Julie Lowell 02 is a Case Manager at Raphael House, a domestic violence emergency shelter in Portland, Oregon that houses up to 12 women and their children at a time. She meets with clients on a daily basis to access social services they need after leaving an abusive relationship. She helps clients find housing, and get emergency financial assistance through the state while tailoring her work to their specific situation and needs. Grace Pazdan 00 reports the following. After completing my service in Peace Corps Morocco this summer, I am now living in DC and working as a Volunteer/Community Outreach Coordinator for an agency that operates several homeless shelters in Northern Virginia. I'm keeping my feminist spirit alive as a Saturday morning abortion clinic escort, DC Rape Crisis Center and Feminist Majority Foundation volunteer. Also, just for the record, I accidentally hung up on Gloria Steinem a few weeks ago while phone calling for the FMF..........OOPS! This fall I'm applying for law school and hope to pursue a career in public interest law, advocating for indigent women. Amanda Silver 98 is the Social Action Coordinator for B'nai Jeshurin Synagogue in New York City. She coordinates a volunteer-run homeless shelter, soup kitchen, mentoring program, the Social Action committee, Latin America Committee, and the environment action task force. Will You be in 91̳? Women's studies majors and minors would like the opportunity to meet with women's studies alumni. If you live in the 91̳ area or plan to be in 91̳ please call or email the Institute so we can arrange a time for you to meet with our students. Thank you! Stay in Touch Each time For Your Information is mailed, an updated list of alumni is sent to those alumni who have asked to be on the list. The list was set up for alumni who wanted to stay in touch with one another by mail or email. If you would like to be added to the list, or have updated information, please contact the Institute.  The Institute is pleased to welcome new Associate Kathy McGowan, the new Womens Studies bibliographer in Rush Rhees Library. For more information see News About Our Associates. Susan Junior Faculty Group Junior Faculty Associates of the SBAI meet to discuss academic, professional, intellectual and social concerns of junior faculty at the 91̳. We have a list-serve, regular meetings, and organize a series of events each year to address the unique challenges that face us at this transitional period in our academic careers. For more information contact Andrs Nader (nadr@mail.rochester.edu). News About Our Associates Douglas Crimp, Department of Art and Art History and Acting Co-Director, Program in Visual and Cultural Studies, taught last July at the Summer Institute on Sexuality, Culture, and Society, University of Amsterdam and in August at the Universidad Complutese Madrid Summer Courses at El Escorial. He was appointed Fanny Knapp Allen Professor of Art History at the 91̳ fall 2002. This coming March he will be a visiting fellow at the Institute for the Humanities, University of Michigan, where he will participate in "Gay Shame," a conference organized by Michigan faculty fellows David Halperin and Valerie Traub and co-sponsored by the Lesbian-Gay-Queer Research Initiative within University of Michigans Institute for Research on Women and Gender. Nancy Forand, Department of Anthropology, published "The Language Ideologies of Courtship Ritual: Maya Pentecostals and Folk Catholics" in the fall 2002 issue of Journal of American Folklore. Kathy B. King, School of Nursing, reports the following publications. King, K.B., Quinn, J., Delehanty, J.M., Rizzo, S. J., Eldredge, D. H., & Caufield, L. & Ling, F.S. (2002). Perception of risk for coronary heart disease in women undergoing coronary angiography: Heart & Lung, 31(4), 246-252. Cardiovascular Risk in Former Gestational Diabetics. National Institute of Nursing Research. NIH.1R55NR07659-01A1. 9/2002-9/2004. ($100,000). K. B. King, PI, D. Guzick, J. Gerich, R. A. Queenan, M. McDermott, collaborators. Ralph P. Locke, Chair of Musicology, Eastman School of Music, presented papers at three European conferences during summer 2002. He was the keynote speaker at the Biennial Conference on Nineteenth-Century Music, organized by University of Leeds (England). His paper, "Nineteenth-Century Music: Quantity, Quality, Qualities"--dealt with the interaction of "great" works of music and more modest or now-forgotten ones, such as parlor songs and music for social dancing. At the University of Wales's conference on Romantic Orientalism he surveyed musical orientalism, 1800-50. And at the quinquennial International Musicological Society conference he focused on the question of "Eastern-ness" in Verdi's opera Aida He has been named chair of the Nominating Committee for the Board of Directors of the American Musicological Society. Kathy McGowan, Rush Rhees Library, has succeeded Mary Huth as the Women's Studies bibliographer. She encourages you to contact her about any of your library needs, such as: questions about locating articles and using electronic resources, purchase requests for materials, intros to library research for your classes. She also encourages you to refer your students to her. Kathy is a reference librarian in Rush Rhees Library. (275-9302,  HYPERLINK "mailto:kathym@library.rochester.edu" kathym@library.rochester.edu) Ernestine McHugh, Humanities Department, Eastman School of Music, gave a public lecture on Buddhist values and the problem of globalization and materialism at Roberts Wesleyan College in their Cultural Life lecture series. She gave the opening address for the Gurung (Tamu) USA Society's annual dinner and cultural program in New York. Her address was entitled "Gurung Sanskriti and Manko Gyan" [Gurung Culture and the Wisdom of the Heart] and was delivered in Nepali and Gurung. McHugh was named book review editor for the Himalayan Research Bulletin in October. Andrs Nader, Department of Modern Languages and Cultures, reports that with help of a Susan. B. Anthony Institute Grant, he gave a paper last November in Potsdam, Germany. The paper will be published as an article, "Bend over bin Laden: eine neue-alte Konstruktion des Feindes in der zwangsheterosexuellen Gesellschaft," in Reprsentationsformen transkultureller Beziehungen, Eds. Monika Ehlers and Eva Lezzi, Vienna: Bhlau Verlag, forthcoming this winter. Reinhild Steingrver, Eastman School of Music, Humanities, Published "Not fate, just history" in Contemporary German Writers: Kerstin Hensel (Birgit Dahlke, Beth Linklater, eds.), University of Wales Press, UK, 2002. She received a German Academic Exchange Service summer research grant for work at German film archives in Potsdam and Berlin in July/ August 2002. The project "Last Features: Defa films 1990-92" represents her new research project.  Migration, Labour and Exploitation: Trafficking in Women and Girls, Spring 2003 issue, Canadian Woman Studies, York University  HYPERLINK "mailto:cwscf@yorku.ca" cwscf@yorku.ca Submissions by January 30 The Fourth Biennial Feminism(s) & Rhetoric(s) Conference, October 23-25, 2003, Ohio State University, Columbus, Ohio http://english.ohio-state.edu/femrhet/ Submissions by February 1, 2003 Spaces In-Between: Negotiating, Resisting, Opposing, Supporting, Difference(s): Creating a Turly Global Feminism, April 12-13, Womens Studies Program, Penn State University Proposals need not be limited to traditional paper presentations.  HYPERLINK "mailto:Jap324@psu.edu" Jap324@psu.edu Submissions by February 1 Masculinities: Global and Local, March 7-8, Kirkland Project for the Study of Gender, Society, and Culture, Hamilton College Submissions for papers, exhibits, performances, etc, by February 8  HYPERLINK "mailto:lcrandal@hamilton.edu" lcrandal@hamilton.edu  January 22-23, Never Go Back Student Leadership Conference: Mobilizing Youth to Save Abortion Rights, Feminist Majority Foundation, Washington DC www.nvergoback.org February 7-8, Race and Gender in Global Perspective, Council on Womens Studies, Duke University, Durham, North Carolina  HYPERLINK "http://www.duke.edu/womstud" www.duke.edu/womstud March 7, Thinking Gender, Graduate Student Research Conference, Los Angeles Center for the Study of Women, University of California  HYPERLINK "http://www.women.ucla.edu" www.women.ucla.edu March 12-15, Bridging the Gulf: Interdisciplinary Perspective in Latin American and Border Studies, Southwest Council of Latin American Studies, New Orleans, Louisiana  HYPERLINK "http://www.baylor.edu/Latin_American" www.baylor.edu/Latin_American March 21-23, Excellence Through Equity: Confronting the Tensions in Universities, University of Toronto  HYPERLINK "http://www.utoronto.ca/equity" www.utoronto.ca/equity March 27-29, The Public Life and Work of Frederick Douglass, Frederick Douglass Institute for African and African-American Studies, 91̳  HYPERLINK "http://www.rochester.edu/College/AAS/index.html" www.rochester.edu/College/AAS April 4-5, Casting Doubt, Program in Visual and Cultural Studies Graduate Conference, 91̳  HYPERLINK "mailto:vcsconf@mail.rochester.edu" vcsconf@mail.rochester.edu April 11-13, Globalization and the Critical Study of Men and Masculinities, American Mens Studies Association, Vanderbilt University, Nashville, Tennessee  HYPERLINK "http://www.mensstudies.org" www.mensstudies.org April 30-May 3, Diversity From a Global Perspective: Thinking Globally, Acting Locally, Leadership Alliance, San Diego, California  HYPERLINK "http://www.DiversityConference.org" www.DiversityConference.org June 19-24, National Womens Studies Association Conference, New Orleans, Louisiana  HYPERLINK "http://www.nwsa.org" www.nwsa.org June 19-23, Women in Charge: Bold, Innovative, Collaborative, American Association of University Women June 19, Pre-Conference Institutes June 19-21, National Conference for College Women Leaders June 20-23, Women National Conference, Providence, Rhode Island www.aauw.org/7000/convention June 22-24, Women Working to Make a Difference, Institute for Womens Policy Research, Washington DC www.iwpr.org  Feminist Majority Foundation Internships in Feminism and Public Policy including the National Clinic Access Project, Campaign to a Help Afghan Women and Girls, National Center for Women and Policing, Press Team, Rock for Choice, Feminist Majority Foundation Online, and Feminist Majority Leadership Alliance Program, year round opportunities, Washington D.C. and Los Angeles  HYPERLINK "http://www.feminist.org/intern/" http://www.feminist.org/intern/ Ms. Magazine Internships http://www.msmagazine.com/internship.asp Women and Public Policy Internship Program  HYPERLINK "http://www.plen.org/interns/programs.html" http://www.plen.org/interns/programs.html  Womens Studies Program Teaching Fellowship, University of California, Santa Barbara Apply by January 23 Frederick Douglass Institute for African and African-American Studies Predoctoral and Postdoctoral Fellowships, and Fellowships for graduate study, 91̳  HYPERLINK "http://www.rochester.edu/College/AAS/index.html" www.rochester.edu/College/AAS Apply by January 31 Research Fellowship, Institute for Womens Policy Research, Washington DC  HYPERLINK "http://www.iwpr.org" www.iwpr.org Apply by February 18 Frederick Douglass Institute for African and African-American Studies Research Awards and Course Development Grants  HYPERLINK "http://www.rochester.edu/College/AAS/index.html" www.rochester.edu/College/AAS Apply by April 15 American Association of University Women Fellowships, Grants and Awards http://www.aauw.org/ Check application dates on web site  Tenure-track Assistant Professor, Womens Studies Program, University of California, Santa Barbara Review of applications began December 17 Assistant Professor (fixed term) and tenure-track Assistant Professor, Minnesota State University, Mankato  HYPERLINK "http://www.mnsu.edu/womenst" www.mnsu.edu/womenst Review of applications began January 13 Assistant Professor, Sonoma State University, California  HYPERLINK "http://www.sonoma.edu/facaffairs/wgs" www.sonoma.edu/facaffairs/wgs Two reviews beginning January 8 and February 8 Visiting Assistant Professor, 2002-2004 Academic Year, Department of Womens Studies, State University of New York at Albany  HYPERLINK "mailto:mpryse@albany.edu" mpryse@albany.edu Review of applications begins February 15 Jobs in women's studies, National Women's Studies Association, Changing Lives Through Feminist Education http://www.nwsa.org/announce.htm Feminist Career Center Job Listings http://www.feminist.org/911/jobs/joblisting.asp Consortium of Humanities Centers and Institutes lists jobs in gender and women's studies  HYPERLINK "http://www.matrix.msu.edu/jobs/historyhumanities-open.html" http://www.matrix.msu.edu/jobs/historyhumanities-open.html  Unless otherwise noted events take place at the 91̳. Harryette Mullen, 1994-95 Susan B. Anthony Institute Rockefeller Foundation humanities fellow in Feminism and Visual Culture, published Sleeping with the Dictionary (University of California Press, 2003). She is nominated as a Finalist for the National Book Award in Poetry. Ms. Magazine Read the Winter 2002 (volume XII, number 4) issue of Ms. in the reception area of the Institute. The Feminist Majority Foundation assumed ownership of Liberty Media for Women, the publisher of Ms. Magazine. Ms. will be non-profit and will be published four times a year during the period of transition. Note: The Institute has a complete set of Ms. magazines available for reference in 540 Lattimore.  HYPERLINK "http://www.msmagazine.com" www.msmagazine.com New Library Resource Kathy McGowan is a Rush Rhees reference librarian and the subject librarian for Women's Studies. She can help you find resources for your papers and projects. Get in touch with Kathy at  HYPERLINK "mailto:kathym@library.rochester.edu" kathym@library.rochester.eduor 275-9302. January 17 Gage Forum meeting 5:30 p.m. To receive meeting updates send Greenwood Books email address to Linda White 123 East Avenue  HYPERLINK "mailto:dwhite@sjfc.edu" dwhite@sjfc.edu, 482-2616 From SBAI Faculty Associate Timothy Madigan: Elizabeth Cady Stanton, Susan B. Anthony and Matilda Joslyn Gage were the triumvirate of the womens rights movement, but Gages name (1826-1898) is not as well known. It is time for her to receive the recognition she deserves for her tremendous contributions to the cause of freedom as a womens rights author, speaker and leader, abolitionist, adopted member of the Mohawk Nations Wolf clan, supporter of native sovereignty and treaty rights, and author of Women, Church and State. Censored 100 years ago by the religious right and the increasingly conservative woman suffrage movement, her 1893 pioneering study of the suppression of women by church and state is now accessible in a new edition prepared for the modern reader by Sally Roesch Wagner. The 91̳ Gage Forum plans a slow reading of Women, Church and State beginning in January 2003. We will also prepare material to encourage high school and college teachers to use Gage material in their classes, hold fund-raisers to support the Matilda Joslyn Gage Foundation, and plan fun trips to the Gage house in Fayetteville. Gage is listed in Whos Who in Hell. January 22 Real People, Real Stories, Real Choices 7:00-8:30 p.m. 91̳ Observes the 30th First Unitarian Anniversary of Roe v. Wade Church, 220 South Winton Rd. February 7, 8, 9 The Vagina Monologues * 7:30 p.m. Information: 395-5584 Tower Fine Arts Tickets: 395-ARTS Center, SUNY Brockport February 13 Susan B. Anthony Birthday Luncheon 12:00 1:30 p.m. Special Guest Speaker Helen Thomas Riverside Susan B. Anthony House Convention Ctr. www.susanbanthonyhouse.org February 14 V-Day: Women's Caucus will display Wilson the clothesline project. The shirts are Commons decorated by victims of sexual assault, and others, to promote awareness HYPERLINK "http://sa.rochester.edu/womencauc/"http://sa.rochester.edu/womencauc/ February 14 The Vagina Monologues * February 16 Tickets, discounted with a student ID, 7:30 p.m. are available at the Common University of Market 91̳ *V-Day is a global movement to stop violence against women and girls. The campaign promotes creative events to increase awareness, raise money and revitalize the spirit of existing anti-violence organizations.  HYPERLINK "http://www.vday.org/" www.vday.org Please stop by the Susan B. Anthony Institute for Gender and Women's Studies, 538 Lattimore Hall, to get additional information on the items noted in this edition. (585) 275-8318 Fax (585) 461-9376 Email: mslf@mail.rochester.edu Web site: http://www.rochester.edu/college/wst  PAGE 1 For Your Information  PAGE 6 For Your Information 9MN  | f g 5 7 8 abcdxyu\0JjU jU5CJ5>* *jUmHnHuhjUhmHnHu5H*6]CJhj5;CJUmHnHuCJ;CJ 5;CJ5CJ OJQJCJCJ:9s 8fBp `x^`` `^`` $&dPa$ &&d P ^`&|k|m|Lh|  + X  + ` 9 h  x1$ `^`` `x^`` , 7 9 acd%$d%d&d'dNOPQx  !x1$ !`1$^`` `^`` `^``vk#<#g#h#i##.%[%&u& ))),,,K, `^``$a$x  !x1$$xa$xuvk<#g##%%&u& )*)C))),,,,K,--...@.A.X.e.g...///-/./O/o///&0'0(0?0@0C0Y0Z1[1x1122&3>333g4h4i4j4446] 5>*\h 5>*\jUjU\50JjU jUjUhmHnHu566h5\5>* *5>*B,,.//00111333444579:0;;5<d<<<\ `^`` x1$x$a$455779*9::/;0;k=x=~>>????@@-AAAAAdC~CCCCFF6GRGTGaGdHpHqHrHtHmI{I4L8LLL"N#NeNfNNNNNNNêããÕCJOJQJaJ0JaJ jUaJPJaJ 5\aJ>* 6>*6]Ա65>*䴳ʴϴ䴳ϴ5Cϴ^5\9<=7=k=~>>t???@@@@@AAdC~CCCDODDD Lh*$^h`$xa$xx$a$ x1$xDD#E`EEEE0FeFFFF6GTGGGG HBHzHHHHIRImI Lhx*$^h`/ L*$ Lh*$^h`mIL#NNPRS~TTTTTTTU:UTUUVVW6WPWXX !1$  !x1$x^^xNNNPPPPQQ6RhRRRSHSTTTTTUU(U)U*U8U9U:UTUUUVWWW"W$W%W&W4W5WPWXX>X?X@XUXVXWXXXYXZX]XYYYYYYYYYj7UjUhmHnHuj\UjUCJOJPJQJ^JaJh0JjU jU6jUmHnHu6]5\CJOJQJaJ>XXYX[X\X]XYYZ[4\\1]]^_+`Naaaaccadbdxx  !x1$  !x1$ !1$ $ !1$a$YGZHZ[ZmZoZpZqZZZ0[1[D[a[c[d[e[[[[[\\2\3\\\\]]]/]0]]]]]]]]]]^^^^^^^^^S_T________```j Uj Uj Uj UjU5\0JOJQJ^J OJQJ^JjOJQJU^JjU0JjU jUh>`(`)`*`aaa=c>ckclcmccccc4d5d6d_d`dbdcdfdd|e}eeeeee:f;f\f]f^fjfkfff5g6g7gTgUggghhiii$i%iiiiiiiijCUjBUjUmHnHujAUj@Uj?U jUjvUj U B*hphjUhmHnHuh jU0J=bdddedfddeefhggggyhNi j j jjXkykkklllx !1$  !x1$x$xa$ijjjjjjj&l'lolplqlllllll mmm nnnnQnSnnnnnzo|ooooooooopppppqqjqyqqqqqqqqǽǸjGUCJjFU66] 5>*\56>*\] 5>*\56>*\]h 5>*\h>*h>*hmHnHujUhmHnHujQEU0JjDU jU9llnnQnnnn/oPooopq>qjqqqvvvw-wx$a$ `^``$`x^``a$ $xx1$a$xxqqqstt@uWuqvvvv?wVwwwwwxxyyFyGyHyjykyxyyzzz{ { {{{%|&|'|(|.|/|0|1|G|H|I|J|P|Q|R|S|i|m|n|¸¸;CJ 5CJ mHnHuj5CJ U5CJ 5jFHUCJhCJOJPJQJ^JaJH*6] 56\] jU0J7-wWwwwwwwbxxxylyyyyy z{{{{%$d%d&d'dNOPQ `x^`` `^``x  !x1${&|G|H|i|j|k|l|m|n| &#$d%d&d'dNOPQ # 0P/ =!8"8#$%1 0 00P/ =!8"8#$%8 PDyK jmmcd@ling.rochester.eduyK @mailto:jmmcd@ling.rochester.edu1DyK -www.cc.rochester.edu:80/college/wst/grad.htmyK bhttp://www.cc.rochester.edu/college/wst/grad.htmDyK csfr@mail.rochester.eduyK >mailto:csfr@mail.rochester.eduDyK mslf@mail.rochester.eduyK >mailto:mslf@mail.rochester.eduDyK cwscf@yorku.cayK ,mailto:cwscf@yorku.caDyK Jap324@psu.eduyK ,mailto:Jap324@psu.eduDyK lcrandal@hamilton.eduyK :mailto:lcrandal@hamilton.eduDyK www.duke.edu/womstudyK 8http://www.duke.edu/womstudDyK www.women.ucla.eduyK 6http://www.women.ucla.edu/DyK www.baylor.edu/Latin_AmericanyK Jhttp://www.baylor.edu/Latin_American5DyK 0http://www.rochester.edu/College/AAS/index.htmlyK `http://www.rochester.edu/College/AAS/index.htmlDyK vcsconf@mail.rochester.eduyK Dmailto:vcsconf@mail.rochester.eduDyK www.mensstudies.orgyK 8http://www.mensstudies.org/DyK www.DiversityConference.orgyK Hhttp://www.diversityconference.org/DyK  www.nwsa.orgyK *http://www.nwsa.org/DyK  http://www.feminist.org/intern/yK @http://www.feminist.org/intern/DyK *http://www.plen.org/interns/programs.htmlyK Thttp://www.plen.org/interns/programs.html/Dd@ 2 <  C A2n/2 pkL7G;gJ/`!B/2 pkL7G;g9b/xuH(z" l'fdɆ6 Ɇ7̻ 33salz,K9ު[u}4VZnu?x0e .{7#ˋ^+ {$KP4ܒ=s˸V8οoM!OuqSCl9utxIY\cOٶ(NJR{+JE_%^*uPa]X75[i%I,U*alyd&.1IyIS̀<MBd"DLJgՉ/;ҘğR*vRbT:AʟHr& 2K9'R,8/VN&։ žDqu7P(!z|b&3E`@| <7 /Sem[ۄBa5UeY٪#keTMf[uvFx};Ⱦ~lo :5Å*\+T* esʅllȲ#;~~>>ޟ^^^N?&ƥf Mojg JgQsp]sDsb=όۆm8]ʳ1#<˸m #>f| g¥ƒ c ]Kk@h }_ I񍡜5Bމ1m6TJY>,a n}u1VP1\U14jj:j Lk^rBEl<\.iv0n ski9:d  Y^+M@8lf&&%n6Dgab61UX)JJ$S;8&īsqb~X/.SRZA#&ayf{(U~)̉Mrm∼ĵ4qQ"?Kܐ9yG.ev yyM><%rk.˳W5Ed y{[ur;Mig7ؙͶ(=J/쓒9 3T9y+wӜdHOIƊDQJ9O26+=+J-5VajP֫=zH*TǮ}b3؟V5ۢZja}Hһd]wCTT]S4cRج5) J3ȫ7`<ָ"O0ʓD#MeG qFjkLŤ,'Q_)}8S#눵rbhƲwc)/Ύbg*z VT<iZ#VhV/}'qTTEY^'ΖqWFzQP~QR~1M~_3FmӢ`j|:SїSrt(R% uZ%&iY>Zfif[xDK_kEO의#Jl{+#E}1Xz+)zyJ;XN,qݐnݯl+)\}2LW( ?1%XcOh,] 1SYԅ13ܲ@Q2ZKW.jNeWIp-5SJ6RB!]UKK/p%|4"^Eٝ%N̮k]^lUkYG.*ZBBBu;vWX(lĎ ǎ AO~Xh駅y~[La;y.F~qPeo'9VRT)w|T"R*/.wK<2d8SBFm1RlR6eqAfPZb6ȬSz̍hZ,:Ao6׻ jn}I aP[n Q tgM/U;RkZ5_= 5XUhŧP$iXQZmuV~Q*scmʝ^僋(JS}R_L(Y>LyS^G/ FQ%Հܨf11]a {r'C4c0HJ}L!vu"OTrlx*6C[$-ƶbD*vRoėn]#-ZPUFk-dJjݖiZIBMM-vބ%k*Fc:]|.'iB}+@?x! 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