Volume 12 Issue 18
“To acquire wisdom, one must observe.” www.brandeishoot.com
October 16, 2015
Brandeis University’s Community Newspaper • Waltham, Mass.
Adjunct faculty turn campaign outward By Charlotte Aaron and Hannah Schuster editors
photo by karen caldwellthe hoot
faculty speak out
Brandeis students, staff and faculty spoke in support of creating a union for non-tenure track professors on Tuesday, Oct. 13. In the ever-busy wake-and-shake area between Usdan and the library where students pass on their way to classes or lunch, union supporters discussed why they believe adjunct faculty members need collective bargaining rights and a place at the table with administration. The unified faculty will seek higher pay, improved job security and career advancement opportunities. Non-tenure track professors often have year-to-year contracts and, each year, must wait to find out if they still have a job, according to speakers at the event. “I have taught hundreds of students, and can say without question that I love doing this … but my own See SPEAK OUT, page 2
Panelists discuss the importance of being an ally By Elianna Spitzer Staff
At Ally Activism: Process, Tensions and Possibilities, a panel at the Women’s Studies Research Center (WSRC), panelists discussed the underlying issues regarding allyship and its usefulness within a social justice movement on Tuesday, Oct. 13. The panel featured Brandeis students, members of the WSRC, and other professors. Phoebe Schnitzer Ph.D of the Brandeis WSRC acted as a moderator for the panel and defined allyship as “choosing to engage in a social cause regardless of personal identity or group membership.” The panel members focused on different areas of what it means to be an ally including personal identity, privilege and communication. Keigan,the panel’s first speaker,focused on the idea of “positionality.” “I see positionality as an intangible space that one holds in relation to a social issue or injustice. Positionality is formed by identity markers such as race, class, gender, socioeconomic status, … and one’s own lived experience.” Keigan explained that affects the way an ally innately responds to a situation within a cause. “It is imperative to understand your positionality before taking action as an ally. By thinking critically about your own identity you can hopefully get a sense of how everything you experience is a reflection of that space you occupy within [that] identity,” she said. Allies working towards a cause
Inside this issue:
may make the mistake of imposing their personal identity markers on the cause as a whole. “For me, understanding positionality means understanding that I can only speak for myself. As a self identified female I can absolutely not speak for all women. I’ve run into problems before of trying to be inclusive of all women without taking into account the innumerable differences that exist amongst women.” Keigan has gained her knowledge surrounding this idea through experience and believes it is important to learn from one’s mistakes. “I often ask myself, ‘Why are we so afraid to make mistakes in the context of social justice allyship?’ And one reason I find is that mistakes make us confront our individual privileges,” said Keigan. Max A. Greenberg Ph.D, of Boston University, echoed this idea of confronting one’s own privileges through the lens of male activism in the feminist movement. “Men are working to undermine a system which fundamentally privileges them… because it privileges them, they are, to some extent, working against their interests, and that is a source of tension. They share a political stance with feminist women, but that the same time, they have a different field of power to negotiate,” he said. Greenberg presented a dichotomy within the feminist movement. He noted that male activists possess the very privileges that they are fighting to end. “Men are frequently given more attention, more respect, unSee ALLY, page 4
News: Beacons program reopened for sophomores Opinion: 9/11 Flag rearranger explains why Arts: Special Collections adds dime novels Features: V.P. of Operations Gray sits down Editorial: Adjunct faculty deserve better pay
Gender and Sexuality Center celebrates anniversary with grand opening By Emily Sorkin Smith Editor
In the lobby of the newly opened Gender and Sexuality Center (GSC), adorned with rainbow ribbons and filled with people wearing pronoun buttons, students and community members gathered for the center’s Grand Opening on Wednesday, Oct.15. The ceremony celebrated the one year anniversary of the center’s founding and fell during National Coming Out Week. The GSC is affil-
iated with the Intercultural Center, though it is located near the Rape Crisis Center (RCC) and the Queer Resources Center (QRC) in Usdan. Felix Tunador is the current Gender and Sexuality Coordinator at the ICC, working alongside four student administrative assistants to create a space filled with resources about gender and sexuality. Tunador is the one professional in charge of the GSC. Molly Gimbel ’16, one of the student administrative assistants for the center, served on the task force
during her sophomore year that proposed creating a center and hiring a full-time professional to manage the center. They saw a need for a full-time position, instead of the part-time position often held by graduate students, to give students the time and resources they needed to discuss gender and sexuality. Finding time to meet with the program coordinator at the ICC was, before the creation of the GSC, much too difficult. “We recognized that there was a
photo by sophia he/the hoot
gender and sexuality center
fall concert Page 2 Alt. rockers The Mowgli’s excite Page 15 audience in Levin Ballroom with Page 10 help from student openers Page 5 Arts: Page 8 Page 12
See GSC, page 3
men’s soccer wins again
Judges take down Mass. Maritime Academy in defensive showdown
Sports: Page 7