VOICES RAISED
October 2015, Issue 47
Creating journeys of survival
Alumni Hall, 2nd floor
300 College Park
Dayton, Ohio
45469-0322
9AM-5PM
Monday-Friday
Other times by reservation
Phone: 937-229-5390
udayton.edu/womenscenter
udwomenscenter.wordpress.com
Director
Lisa Rismiller
Programming Coordinator
Margaret Murray
Administrative Assistant
Karen Barrett
Graduate Assistant
Tessa Terrell 16
Editor, Communication Assistant
Amanda Dee 16
[email protected]Top left image by YWCA artist from the
Take a Walk in my Shoes exhibit in the WC
Resource Library.
Center image by Mark Hassel.
Art provides a creative outlet for people
served about 90,000 women and children.
facing a variety of issues, domestic violence in-
Even though these statistics are shocking, the
cluded. The Womens Center is hosting an ex-
art that will hang in the Womens Center will
hibit called A Journey of Healing, comprised
not only spread awareness about domestic
of art wholly produced by survivors of domes-
violence but also provide a sense of hope that
tic violence.
individuals can and do surviveand succeed
The artwork presented
after being victimized.
will be a documentation
Halley elaborated on
of the artists personal
the goals of the exhibit
evolution of breaking free
in regard to the con-
from domestic violence
versations and actions
and prevailing through
that, hopefully, will oc-
life after they find safe-
cur in response to the
ty. These pieces are on
artwork. You will kind
display in the Womens
of be able to work with
Center throughout the month of
October.
Artemis Center, a nonprofit organization that provides services
3,060 women in our
communities are physically
assaulted by a current or
former partner.
to victims of domestic violence,
them through
their journey,
she
explains.
That is what
we are hoping
serves the Dayton community. They hope
to do. Everyone interprets art in a different
not only to help victims but to also educate
way, but we are hoping that they see that
our community about the issue of domestic
progression. One of the important things
violence. Lori Halley, director of marketing
about domestic violence: there is getting
and development at Artemis Center, provid-
your safety plan, getting out of the crisis
ed some statistics about domestic violence in
situation, but then there is so much that
Dayton and the surrounding community.
happens afterwards. We are hoping peo-
3,060 women in our communities are phys-
ple will see that.
ically assaulted by a current or former partner,
she shares. Since 1985, the Artemis Center has
CONT. p. 4
WHATS GOING ON?
Love Your Body Week: Post-It Positivity Display
Monday, Oct. 12-Friday, Oct. 16 - KU Hangar & RecPlex
Stop by The Hangar windows in Kennedy Union or the pool windows in
the main entrance of the RecPlex to view the Post-It Positivity Display for
Love Your Body Week. The Womens Center, along with countless students, faculty, and staff, write thousands of positive affirmations, sayings,
and quotes on colorful Post-It notes. Passers-by can find a Post-It that
resonates with them and take it to remind themselves they are perfect just
the way they are.
Attention to Detail: Financial Finishing Touches for Women
Tuesday, Oct. 27 - KU 222, 11:30AM-1PM
A TIAA-CREF representative will share financial planning strategies including
learning how to allocate your investments and assets, knowing your options
when making an estate plan, devising an elder care plan that works, and pursuing your passion with insights on life after your career. Seating is limited, so
registration is required. Please visit udayton.edu/womenscenter/calendar and
scroll down to the TIAA-CREF listing to reserve your seat. While all are welcome, this workshop is geared toward women nearing retirement.
Recognizing Violence Workshop
Friday, Dec. 4 - KU 310, 12-1PM
Intimate partner violence and domestic abuse is present in our community.
We may not see visible abuse or recognize its behaviors and signs, but it
affects individuals on our campus- students, faculty and staff, and no one is
immune. In this hour-long training provided by Artemis Center, learn about
the domestic violence dynamic, how to identify and help victims, and how
we can all make a concerted effort to end intimate partner violence and domestic abuse in our community. Lunch will be provided for all participants.
Seating is limited, so registration is required. Please visit udayton.edu/
womenscenter/calendar and scroll down to the workshop listing to reserve
your seat.
For the full calendar, please visit udayton.edu/womenscenter/calendar
udwomenscenter.wordpress.com
PROFILE
Laura Gentner, UDs first LGBTQ+ support services GA
At the start of this academic year, the University of
non-LGBTQ+, and about
Dayton filled its first-ever LGBTQ+ (Lesbian, Gay, Bi-
77 percent of those people
sexual, Transgender, Queer) support services graduate
support the inclusion of
assistant (GA) position under Student Development.
LGBTQ+ members of soci-
Alumna Laura Gentner is new to this position but has hit
ety. But only about 14 per-
the ground running.
cent actually do something
Student Development created a task force that report-
about it.
ed the need for support services for those identifying as
Gentner encourages every-
LGBTQ+, so this position was created to educate and
one on UDs campus to be a
support all students, especially LGBTQ+ students. This is
part of that 14 percentand
the first graduate assistant position for LGBTQ+ support
Photo courtesy of Gentner.
services on UDs campus, and Gentner is excited about the
by welcoming and valuing all members of our community.
possibilities.
This position will help the school and the campus create
to increase that percentage
One way to get involved is to go through the Counseling
Centers Ally Training. Volunteers from the Counseling
a truer version of UD through its Catholic and Marianist
Center and faculty and staff facilitate a four-hour training
values, Gentner says. The Catholic values of respecting
program for faculty, staff and students to learn about the
the dignity of every human individual, and with the Mari-
issues LGBTQ+ identifying people face on a day-to-day
anist charism of welcoming everyone to the tableregard-
basis and how they can support them.
less of background, color, or whoever they arewherever
I really think that when LGBTQ students are recog-
they are in their journey, we are all welcomed to the same
nized and welcomed as full and true members of our
table. If I can contribute to that ideal of community that
community, Gentner says, that the whole community
we hold so dearly at UD, then I will be doing my job.
benefits.
There are approximately 250 college campuses in the
Claire Schmig, Public Relations 18
country that have a paid position focusing on LGBTQ+,
and UD is now among them.
The main focus of Gentners work is to coordinate with
To contact Laura Gentner, email [email protected] For
campus partners in support of LGBTQ-identified stu-
current LGBTQ+ resources, please visit udayton.edu/women-
dents. She offers presentations under Dont Cancel Your
scenter/info/lgbt.
Class, which encourages professors to invite speakers
from a selection of programs to give presentations to
educate students on issues instead of canceling class. In
addition, she will create a website to serve as a hub of
resources and services for anyone identifying as LGBTQ+.
About 96 percent of Americans identify as straight, or
LGBTQ
Redefining Realness by Janet Mock, The Advocate,
On Being Gay by Brian McNaught
Additional books and materials on this subject are available at the WC Resource Library. For more information
on the library, flip to the back cover.
FEATURE
Creating journeys of survival (cont. from cover)
Mark Hassel, one of the contributing
artists and a survivor himself, initiated
the concept of this exhibit in collaboration
with Laurie T. Miller. They approached
Artemis Center with the hope of producing artwork centered on the journey that
domestic violence survivors undergo. The
University of Dayton Womens Center has
the honor of hosting their thought- and
emotion-provoking creations.
Halley describes the collection of Hassels work as a whole: It went from this
whimsical, a lot of lines, a lot of colors,
almost like chaos on the page. Then, you
have these beautiful, kind of calming
pieces. You can see them putting their
feelings on the page. The development
of the artists state of mind and passage of
time are reflected through the continuum
of pieces.
Hassel reflects on the transition of style and medium
within his pieces and the resulting message portrayed:
As a painter, Ive used various mediums from watercolor to oil. Some of my latest work is mixed media and
collage. There is a transition from realism to abstract in
my work of late.
Hassel described how art can function as a healing
mechanism. For many visual and performing artists, it
is a very personal, vulnerable, and intimate experience
to put our craft out there, so to speak. At the same time,
it can be profoundly healing, he says. This is especially
true for those of us who are survivors of abuse, when
so much of our journey in life has been just to survive.
udwomenscenter.wordpress.com
Reacting to the completion of his work and the exhibits
installation in the Womens Center, Hassel says, To be
able to fulfill a personal dream that is both challenging
and creative can be life-changing.
The concept of using art both as a process to transform and to recover, in a therapeutic sense, is an interesting notion. Not only does the performance of the
artwork provide a restorative method for the artist, but
it also allows onlookers to gain a sense of the experiences that the artist actually endured, to step closer toward
empathy. It engages the audience by asking them to
place themselves in the position of the artist and emotionally ride along to grasp the twists and turns in the
Left artwork by Laurie T. Miller. Above by Mark Hassel. Both Hassel and Millers work will be featured in the Womens Center in October.
RESOURCES:
artists journeys of survival.
With October recognized as Domestic Violence Awareness Month, this exhibit, ideally, will spark conversations
that will lead to both action and understanding. Please
utilize the uniqueness of this project and its presence on
the UD campus to explore the reality of and resolutions
to the existence of violence in all its forms.
Julia Hall, English 18
For information on the Dec. 4 Recognizing Violence
Workshop, please go to p. 2.
VIOLENCE/ABUSE/POWER
You Can Be Free by G. NiCarthy & S. Davidson
Women in Shadow and Light by Jan Goff-LaFontaine
Additional books and materials on this subject are
available at the WC Resource Library. For more information on the library, flip to the back cover.
Artemis Center, 310 W. Monument Ave.
Phone: (937)461-5091 /
24 Hour Crisis Line: (937)222-7233
Artemis Center provides support and information for
victims of domestic violence and their children.
Womanline, 4617 Presidential Way / Phone: (937)2233446
Womanline provides compassionate, affordable mental
health counseling services for women to help overcome
the trauma of childhood sexual abuse and to teach
young children how to protect themselves from abuse.
YWCA Dayton, 141 W. Third St.
Phone: (937)461-550 / 24 Hour Crisis Line: (937)2227233
Provides confidential domestic violence and sexual
assault supportive services. These services include
prevention, intervention, education, advocacy, clinical
services, and shelter services.
For more resources, please visit udayton.edu/womenscenter/info/violence/survivors.php.
VOICES FROM WOMENS & GENDER STUDIES
Spotlight: Teaching and research for social change
Our faculty members are the WGS programs greatest asset, now numbering over 70.
Here are some of the latters recent accomplishments in WGS-related teaching, research, and activism.
Rebecca Whisnant, Director
Dr. Jana Bennett - Religious Studies
Dr. Neomi DeAnda - Religious Studies
In fall 2014, Dr. Bennett developed
Dr. DeAnda drew on her research con-
and taught a doctoral seminar on
cerning the theology of breast milk in
Sarah Coakley, an internation-
her contribution to the Sept. 15 panel
ally-known Anglican theologian
discussion Communities Engaging
whose work deals with questions
Mary, attended by over 150 mem-
of gender, sexuality, power, and
bers of the UD community.
desire. Coakleys method is to do deep retrievals from
Christian tradition, both to reveal misogynies that exist
within that tradition and also to show how the tradi-
Dr. Natalie Florea Hudson - Political Science
tion offers pro-active practices for women. My hope
In April 2015, Dr. Hudson attended the 100th Anniver-
for these students, Dr. Bennett reports, was that they
sary Conference for Womens Inter-
would learn from Coakleys method and would contin-
national League for Peace and
ue to put forward gender questions as crucial for doing
Freedom (WILPF) in The Hague,
theology well.
Netherlands. During the confer-
Dr. Caroline Merithew - History
A womens and labor historian, Dr.
Merithew both consulted on and was
ence, entitled Womens Power
to Stop War, Dr. Hudson contributed to the roundtable How
Can Feminist Researchers Contribute
interviewed for the documentary
to Feminist Peace Activism? Opportunities and Pitfalls.
We Were Not Ladies. We Were
She reflected on her experience participating in this
Women, which aired over Labor
historic event.
Day weekend on Illinois Public
Radio. Focusing on the coal mining
and union wars of the 1930s, the
documentary looks at the women doing unwaged
Dr. Rebecca Whisnant - Philosophy
In August, Dr. Whisnant contributed to a group
post at the philosophy blog Daily Nous,
labor in their homes and the influential role
entitled Philosophers on Prostitutions
these women played in the battle for higher
Decriminalization, and her essay Pornog-
family wages, better working conditions, and
raphy and Humiliation is being translated
democratic unionism.
for publication in the newsletter of Kvinnofronten, the Swedish Womens Front.
udwomenscenter.wordpress.com
VOICES HEARD
Love your body
The beauty template that women and girls receive is narrow, unrealistic,
and, most importantly, ingrained into their brains, leaving any woman
who does not fit this template feeling inadequate. Challenge the message
that a womans value is best measured through her willingness and ability
to embody current beauty standards.
For more information on the Love Your Body Week: Post-It Positivity Display,
please go to p. 2.
LOVE YOUR BODY
Ourselves, Growing Older by P. Doress-Worters & D. Laskin Stegel
Self-Esteem Comes in All Sizes by Carol Johnson
Additional books and materials on this subject are available at the
WC Resource Library. For more information on the library, flip to the
back cover.
Alumni Hall, 2nd floor
300 College Park
Dayton, OH 45469-0322
FROM THE RESOURCE LIBRARY
Reading by color
The colored circles throughout Voices Raised arent just eye candy: each one represents a subject matter contained
in our Resource Library. The library is a comfortable space within the Womens Center on the second floor of
Alumni Hall, room 208A. The library houses periodicals such as Alive, The Advocate, The Chronicle of Higher
Education, Harvard Womens Health Watch, Ms., and Women in Higher Education; brochures on community
resources and topical information; as well as books and other multimedia, which can all be checked out.
Some subjects available in the resource library include:
Emotional Health
LGBTQ
Spirituality & Religion
Feminism & Gender Roles
Physical Health
Violence/Abuse/Power
Leadership
Social Justice & Climate
Women of Color & Diversity
Feel free to stop in and browse or search for materials through the UD Roesch Library catalog.
udwomenscenter.wordpress.com