#university of pennsylvania

Webcam Model(Chocolate_queen2) is live
LIVE

Last week, a NYTimes article by Kate Taylor entitled “Sex on Campus: She Can Play that Game Too” made its rounds throughout the Internet, and especially the University of Pennsylvania community, the backdrop setting for Taylor’s article.

Yesterday, Penn alumna Raja Jalabi published a powerful response in the UK Guardian called “College Culture? An Alcohol-fueled Frenzy of Sexual Harassment.

I think both of these articles are necessary and important: necessary for dialogue, necessary for gaining perspective, and important in ushering change to create safer spaces for everyone both at Penn and nationwide.

Having read Jalabi’s piece, grateful for her publicly speaking up and out, I’ve decided to share a statement I wrote last week in response to Taylor’s initial article:

I found Kate Taylor’s article to be everything from triggering, disturbing, lacking sexual diversity, and deeply heterosexist, to necessary and important. I kept thinking about my own experience as an undergraduate at Penn, a four-year period I cherish, during which I built incredible and lasting friendships, learned from awe-inspiring mentors and educators, and solidified my personal and professional passions and dreams.

Yet, my time at Penn was also coated by both traumatizing and empowering sexual journeys. After my first month at Penn, I was date raped on my dorm room floor by a male stranger while I was drunk (a non-Penn student in town visiting a friend on campus); days before graduation, after a year and a half of chosen celibacy to heal from the aforementioned and other traumas, I had a positive and consensual one-night stand with a male Penn student, transitioning me into a sexual narrative that has since remained positive, consensual, and empowering.

Amongst the host of reasons I chose to attend Penn was their Classical Studies department and The Kelly Writer’s House. Others went for Wharton Business School, Penn’s Nursing School, to play basketball, to join an acclaimed performing arts group, or myriad other academic and extracurricular activities, taught and overseen by top notch educators offering world-renowned facilities.

Penn has spent billions of dollars on academic, research, financial aid, scholarship, scholarly, and creative endeavors. I hope that the Penn community - current students, faculty, staff, administrators, alumnae, and alumni - take this article as an opportunity to approach sexual experiences on campus, sexual identity on campus, sexual orientation on campus, heterosexism on campus, sexism on campus, sexual violence on campus, drinking on campus, drugs on campus, and student life on campus with the same care, funding, and seriousness that are given to matters of the mind.

Penn students, faculty, staff, alumnae, and alumni seek to be leaders in world thought, innovation, and change.

So let us.

Let this be an opportunity to embrace dialogue. To wear Kate Taylor’s article vulnerably on our sleeves. To pioneer a revolution awakening from the silence on these matters and the endless oppressions that jeopardize students’ safety and well-being. To ensure the next time someone writes a feature article in the New York Times about female student sexuality on Penn’s campus it lets go of anonymity and includes LGBTQ, male, and other gendered voices, and welcomes perspective from other campus spaces left entirely overlooked.

May we cease to shame others.

May we cease to harbor shame upon and within ourselves.

May we cease to feel threatened by sharing our stories.

May we ignite a dialogue through and with compassion and empathy.

May our bodies receive the same dignity we demand of and for our minds.

www.carolinerothstein.com
Teddy Pendergrass photographed by Bernard Gotfryd at the University of Pennsylvania for Newsweek, 19Teddy Pendergrass photographed by Bernard Gotfryd at the University of Pennsylvania for Newsweek, 19Teddy Pendergrass photographed by Bernard Gotfryd at the University of Pennsylvania for Newsweek, 19Teddy Pendergrass photographed by Bernard Gotfryd at the University of Pennsylvania for Newsweek, 19Teddy Pendergrass photographed by Bernard Gotfryd at the University of Pennsylvania for Newsweek, 19

Teddy Pendergrass photographed by Bernard Gotfryd at the University of Pennsylvania for Newsweek, 1979.


Post link
Please join us for a virtual talk presented by *Making the Renaissance Manuscript* curator Dr. Nicho

Please join us for a virtual talk presented by *Making the Renaissance Manuscript* curator Dr. Nicholas Herman on Thursday, June 18, 2020, 4:00 - 5:30 p.m. EST. Through this talk sponsored by Friends of Lehigh Libraries, Dr. Herman will examine the making of the hand-written and hand-illuminated book during a time of great political, religious, and technological transformation in Europe and will conceptualize the recent collaborative exhibition that opened in the Kislak Center back in February. Follow the link to register for this free event: http://ow.ly/5PbO50A8fxx


Post link
Name Rebecca Cordes ChanLocation Baltimore, MD, USAWhat do you do? I am a Program Officer for the Lo

Name Rebecca Cordes Chan
Location Baltimore, MD, USA
What do you do? I am a Program Officer for the Local Initiative Support Corporation (LISC) National Creative Placemaking Program. Creative Placemaking can be a loaded term, but I think of it as resident-driven process that builds on existing cultural assets. I spend the majority of my time managing LISC’s Creative Placemaking Technical Assistance program. Through a partnership between The Kresge Foundation and The National Endowment for the Arts, the program is a pilot intended to provide the creative placemaking field a deeper understanding of how to do arts-based community development well. I am working on specialized technical assistance plans for 16 organizations with the goal of advancing each organization’s ability to lead successful projects that result in positive short- and long-term outcomes for their community. Prior to LISC, I was an arts-based community development practitioner as Station North’s Program Director, then later for a philanthropic organization as their Program Officer. I was named 10 people to watch under 30 by Baltimore Sun in 2014, and was selected to be part of the Baltimore Social Innovation Journal’s cohort the same year. I have an M.S. in Historic Preservation from University of Pennsylvania, and B.A. in Anthropology from the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign.
Share what you do. http://bit.ly/ADEsubmit. 


Post link

Today’s Hamilton aesthetic: Lin’s commencement speech at the University of Pennsylvania

loading