THE
BROWN DAILY HERALD vol. cxlix, no. 88
since 1891
WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 15, 2014
Butler: Family matters not so matter-of-fact in ‘Bacchae’ Gender theorist unpacks Greek classic, kinship between ancient gods and modern mortals By GABRIELLA REYES CONTRIBUTING WRITER
“You can’t choose your family,” the saying goes. But kin relations are inevitably defined by participants and outside sources, said philosopher and gender theorist Judith Butler in a Tuesday lecture entitled “Fallible Recognition: The Politics of Kinship in the Bacchae.” Butler, a professor of comparative literature at the University of California at Berkeley, was greeted by an overflowing crowd at the Granoff Center for the Performing Arts. Her talk, which focused on familial relations in the ancient Greek tragedy “The Bacchae” by Euripides, was preceded by a staged reading of the play at Leeds Theater. Butler’s talk was this year’s edition of the annual Roger B. Henkle Memorial Lecture, which is sponsored by the Department of Modern Culture and Media, the Department of English and the Malcolm S. Forbes Center for Culture and Media Studies. Butler delved into how kinship can be defined in various historical or mythological contexts. She described kinship as a way of organizing people generationally, based on reproduction, partriarchal lineages or freely chosen relations. Kinship is often defined as a binding, stable network of relationships, but this definition » See BUTLER, page 4
After dip, study abroad participation sees uptick Women, humanities concentrators more likely to go abroad than men, STEM concentrators By JOSEPH ZAPPA SENIOR STAFF WRITER
After several years of significant decline, the number of students studying abroad has rebounded modestly over the past two years. From 2007-08 to 2012-13, the number students studying abroad during the academic year fell from a high of 565 to a low of 381 — a 33 percent drop over five years, according to figures obtained from the Office of Institutional Research. But the number of students studying abroad climbed back to 415 last year and 282 undergraduates are abroad this fall, consistent with last fall’s number. The downward trend from fall 2007 to spring 2013 is not Brown-specific, but
rather reflects the nationwide impact of the Great Recession, said Kendall Brostuen, associate dean and director of international programs. He said a recession may hinder a family’s ability to pay for plane tickets or other major expenses and may leave students with less spending money, encumbering their capacity to take full advantage of their time outside the United States by preventing them from traveling, eating out or participating in local recreational activities. Several students mentioned these experiences as key elements of their time abroad. Anna Martin ’16, who is spending the semester in Barcelona, said budgetary concerns figured into her initial considerations before her study abroad program.
But she ultimately found that a semester away from Providence would cost her no more than a semester at Brown. In addition to financial factors, fear of missing out on Brown activities and classes, often strenuous requirements in scientific and mathematical fields and concerns over scheduling conflicts with summer internships sometimes deter students from studying abroad, Brostuen said. A proliferation of summer alternatives to semester-long study abroad, such as international internship opportunities and undergraduate teaching and research awards, might also diminish the number of students electing to study away during a semester, Brostuen said. Women are more likely to study abroad than men, who compose just 32 percent of the undergraduates studying abroad this year, Brostuen said. This
trend, too, goes beyond Brown, he added. For students outside of STEM, studying abroad may pose no challenge to their academic plans and may in fact even play an integral role in fulfilling them. Philip Heller ’16 said his coursework at St. Andrews University in Scotland this fall fills two international relations concentration requirements, adding that St. Andrews has one of the best international relations programs in Europe. Though the academic rigor of other universities’ courses may not match the rigor at Brown, study abroad offers outof-class learning experiences that are valuable in their own way and provide a break from the structured learning environment at the University, students said. “I was feeling burnt out … and I knew a change of pace would be good for me,” Martin said, adding that studying » See ABROAD, page 2
PC student files civil rights complaint against U. in assault case Student alleges that U. mistreated sexual assault case as ‘misconduct,’ not as Title IX civil rights violation By MOLLY SCHULSON METRO EDITOR
A female Providence College student who accused two Brown students of sexual assault last year filed a civil rights complaint with the U.S. Department of Education Saturday against the University for allegedly mishandling her case, the Providence Journal reported Tuesday. The Education Department’s Office for Civil Rights will now look into whether or not the University handled the PC student’s case appropriately and complied with federal civil rights laws, wrote Wendy Murphy, the PC student’s attorney, in an email to The Herald. The PC student alleges in her complaint that the University did not treat her inquiry as a Title IX civil rights violation, but rather as one involving “general misconduct,” the ProJo reported.
When a case is handled as generic misconduct, civil rights standards of Title IX do not apply, Murphy wrote. While federal standards mandate that plaintiffs in civil rights cases must receive equal redress for wrongs suffered regardless of race or national origin, these standards do not apply to cases treated as incidents of misconduct, Murphy wrote. The lack of consistent standards makes violence against women harder to prove, she added. This discrepancy leads Murphy to advise her clients to report assaults and other violent crimes “as a civil rights harm based on anything other than sex,” she wrote. The PC student alleges that last November, two first-year Brown football players sexually assaulted her in a Brown dorm room. The student did not file a complaint with the Providence police
until February of this year. The undergraduates were ordered to leave campus in late April, and one of them withdrew from the University before the beginning of the current school year, The Herald reported at the time. In August, a grand jury chose to not indict the two accused football players due to a lack of evidence, so they will not face criminal charges. After the grand jury’s decision, a third Brown student, who remains on the football roster, was implicated in the case after police filings of cellphone records and emails showed the third student’s communication via text message with the two accused players. One of the accused, a former undergrad, requested last week that the Rhode Island Superior Court seal his records. This is not the first federal civil rights complaint that the University has received this year. Lena Sclove ’15.5, a former undergrad who reported being raped by another student last year, filed
Title IX and Clery Act complaints against the University in May, The Herald reported at the time. In response to Sclove’s civil rights complaints, the University released a statement that said its policy “is not to discuss individual cases or details of ongoing reviews.” The University will “face criticism, (civil rights) complaints and relentless lawsuits until they fix their segregationist policies and explicitly treat women with the full equality they deserve,” Murphy wrote to The Herald. The University has not yet received notice from the Department of Education about the PC student’s new complaint, wrote Marisa Quinn, vice president for public affairs and University relations, in an email to The Herald. While federal law prevents the University from commenting on disciplinary actions involving students, administrators will “cooperate fully if asked” by authorities, Quinn wrote.
Researchers revisit Darwin’s untested theories on invasive species
By FRANCES CHEN CONTRIBUTING WRITER
Plants from more genetically diverse regions are more likely to become invasive species in new environments, according to a new study conducted by Dov Sax, associate professor of ecology and evolutionary biology, and Jason Fridley, associate professor of biology at Syracuse University. Published Oct. 1 in the journal Global Ecology and Biogeography, the study is the first to
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Researchers found that plants growing in more genetically diverse areas are more likely to be invasive.
Science & Research
explicitly test this idea at a macro level. Eight years ago, Sax met Fridley at the Ecological Society of America Conference. They realized that they shared a similar frustration: No one had ever explicitly tested Darwin’s theories on invasive species. “Darwin wrote about these ideas more than 150 years ago and various authors had mentioned it in publication … but no one had actually tried to test (them),” Sax said. Sax and Fridley hypothesized that species from more phylogenetically diverse regions were more likely to successfully become invasive in a new environment. Phylogenetic diversity is a measure of the number of different evolutionary lineages, Sax said. When a plant species spreads to a region where it is not native, the plant can be termed “invasive” and has the potential to cause damage to the
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Study’s results could lead to future efforts, policies to stop the spread of invasive plant species
indiginous plants, or even cause human health problems. Since species growing in more diverse areas faced more competition, they are constantly forced to evolve. The traits they acquire over generations allow them to compete better in a new environments, he said. To test their hypothesis, the researchers looked at various data sets on invasive plants. Since botanists generally group the world into 35 different geographic regions, the researchers used these same regions when looking at plant data, Fridley said. They pulled data from previous research on where various plant families grow and looked at the number of different plant families in each of the regions to estimate their phylogentic diversity, he said. » See SPECIES, page 2 t o d ay
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