TuftsDaily10-25-2012

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THE TUFTS DAILY

TUFTSDAILY.COM

Thursday, october 25, 2012

VOLUME LXIV, NUMBER 33

Where You Read It First Est. 1980

Sexton delivers inaugural Africana City officials consider Studies lecture building hotel in Davis Square by

Audrey Michael

Daily Editorial Board

Jared Sexton, associate professor and director of African American Studies at the University of California, Irvine, last night gave the inaugural lecture for the new Africana studies major and minor housed under the Africana Studies program. In the lecture, titled “People of Color Blindness: Racial Politics After Coalition,” Sexton discussed the implications of slavery and “anti-blackness” in the context of oppression and structural violence. Associate Professor of English and Director of American Studies Christina Sharpe opened the lecture, followed by a few words from Dean of Academic Affairs Nancy Bauer. “This is the first public academic event the program has sponsored,” Bauer said. In her introduction, Sharpe outlined the reasons for selecting Sexton to give the inaugural lecture. “I can think of no better person to set out the importance of the work to be done in Africana studies and what is at stake,” she said. “Sexton looks at the ways that multiracialism works to buttress, reconfigure and rein-

by Josh

by

Naomi Ali

The university on Nov. 5 will honor Leila Fawaz, the Issam M. Fares professor of Lebanese and Eastern Mediterranean Studies and director of the Fares Center for Eastern Mediterranean Studies, during a ceremony celebrating the French government naming her a chevalier in the French National Order of the Legion of Honor. The French consul general in Boston acknowledged Fawaz as a chevalier, one of France’s most prestigious honors, at a ceremony this summer in Cambridge. The tribute, the equivalent of a knighthood, is bestowed by decree of the president of France and is the first class of five possible decorations from the French National Order of the Legion of Honor. The award recognizes her work promoting French academic research and thought at American universities. “A lot of hard work goes into our academic careers, and it is gratifying to see its impact beyond our immediate surroundings,” Fawaz told the Daily in an email.

The Somerville Board of Aldermen last week motioned to build a new hotel in Davis Square, claiming that the project would be a strong addition to the community and foster patronage of local businesses and restaurants. The hotel would be located in the parking lot behind the Davis Square Post Office on the intersection of Day Street and Herbert Street. The size of the new building has not been determined, but it will likely contain between 100 and 115 rooms. “For several years, there’s been good evidence to suggest that Somerville could support an additional hotel, and our prime location is the Davis Square area,” Somerville Director of Communications Tom Champion said. “This would support organizations associated with Tufts, as well as the demands of the growing Somerville population.” Hotel industry experts have indicated an increasing demand for additional hotel rooms in the Somerville area, which currently houses two hotels and one bed and breakfast inn. While the city could not pursue hotel construction

Virginia Bledsoe / The Tufts Daily

Dr. Jared Sexton last night spoke about racial politics in honor of the new Africana Studies Program. vigorate regimes of anti-blackness and normative sexualities,” Sharpe added. The Africana Studies program earlier in the afternoon hosted a celebratory reception in the Coolidge Room in Ballou Hall, which Sexton attended. “This is a moment to mark, both in terms of celebration and in terms of what is to be done now, as we commit to the vital and necessary intellectual and political work that is the center of Africana studies,” Sharpe said. Sharpe then thanked undergraduates who worked to make the Africana studies major and minor a reality.

Fletcher professor named chevalier by French government Contributing Writer

Weiner

Daily Editorial Board

Fawaz’s interest in FrenchAmerican relations stems from her work in education, she said. Fawaz attended the American University of Beirut for her bachelor’s and first graduate degrees. “I received my baccalaureate degrees and my first graduate degree from French institutions and used that to continue to read about what scholars abroad have been doing research on,” Fawaz said. “We, the faculty, rarely confine ourselves to keeping up with research done only in English.” Fawaz is a member of the Council on Foreign Relations and of the Comite Scientifique of the Maison Mediterranenne des Sciences de l’Homme at the Universite d’Aix-Marseille. She acts as a visiting professor at the Ecole des Hautes Etudes en Sciences Politiques et Sociales, Paris as well as at the Universite de Provence. She served as dean of the College of Liberal Arts and of Jackson College from 1996 to 2001. “[The award] is a recognition of a lifetime achievement in striving for connections see FAWAZ, page 2

“They insisted that these curricular additions were necessary and central to the university’s educational mission,” she said. Sexton echoed Sharpe’s sentiments. “In a real way, [the students] are responsible for this program,” he said. Sexton began his lecture by describing and critiquing the work of various political theorists and scholars who have written on the politics of race, slavery and violence, including Giorgio Agamben, Frantz Fanon, Saidiya V. Hartman and see SEXTON, page 2

when the studies were released due to financial constraints, improvements in the Somerville economy in recent years have made the plan more realistic. The city last April published a long-term development plan called SomerVision, which addresses the importance of hotels in the community, according to Champion. “[Hotels] are important economic engines,” the plan says. “In addition to bringing visitors to shop and dine in Somerville’s local business districts, hotels generate substantial tax revenues for the city.” Concerns include how the hotel will provide parking for its guests in an area that already lacks sufficient parking, as well as the possibility that construction would disrupt the weekly Davis Square Farmers Market, which currently takes place in the parking lot where the new hotel would be built. Ward Six Alderman Rebekah Gewirtz is confident that a compromise will be made between all the parties affected by the new hotel. “We’ll make sure the Farmers Market will still be able to function,” she said. “This will be see HOTEL, page 2

“Mount Trashmore” raises sustainability awareness

Kyra Sturgill / The Tufts Daily

The Office of Sustainability littered the Res Quad in trash in observance of Campus Sustainability Day yesterday. The mounds of garbage, all of which had been collected from five uphill residence halls, brought attention to the amount of waste the Tufts community produces over the course of a week.

Conference to explore Africa’s economic potential by

Daphne Kolios

Daily Editorial Board

The Institute for Business in the Global Context at the Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy will be hosting a conference that begins today, titled “Africa’s Turn? The Promise and Reality of the Global Economy’s ‘Final Frontier.’”

Inside this issue

The conference, which is designed as an interdisciplinary approach towards understanding Africa’s potential for economic growth and development, will run through tomorrow with a series of panel discussions featuring faculty and keynote speakers. Although the conference was originally scheduled for

this past spring, it was moved to this semester to accommodate speakers’ schedules, according to Bhaskar Chakravorti, senior associate dean of international business and finance and executive director of Fletcher’s Institute for Business in see AFRICA, page 2

Today’s sections

Playwright Christopher Shinn discusses his politically relevant play, “Now or Later.”

Jumbo families crowded the Hill for an action-packed Parents and Family Weekend.

see WEEKENDER, page 5

see CAPTURED, page 8

News Features Weekender Captured Editorial | Op-Ed

1 3 5 8 10

Op-Ed Comics Classifieds Sports

11 12 14 Back


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