With permission, an email from Professor William A. Cohen:Dear LGBTQI Friends, Colleagues, and Allies,Congrats Dr. Lindemann!!!
It is a great pleasure to inform you that our own Marilee Lindemann is
the recipient of a Michael Lynch Service Award from the
Gay-Lesbian/Queer Caucus of the Modern Language Association of America
for 2007. The award honors Marilee's extensive service in building and
directing the LGBT Studies program at the University of Maryland, as
well as her innovative scholarship and teaching in queer studies.
The Michael Lynch Service Award is meant, in Eve Kosofsky Sedgwick's
words, "to publicize and celebrate--and as widely as possible--the
range, the forms, the energy, and the history of queer activism by
academics." The prize will be awarded at the MLA Convention in Chicago
later this month.
Please join me in congratulating Marilee for this impressive and
well-deserved honor.
Best wishes for the end of the semester,
Bill
--
William A. Cohen
Associate Professor
Department of English
University of Maryland
College Park, MD 20742
wcohen@umd.edu
Thursday, December 13, 2007
Marilee Lindemann wins award!
Friday, December 7, 2007
Trans in College
It is a very interesting story that touches on a lot of the struggles faced by transgender college students across the country.
To read the story, click here.
Wednesday, December 5, 2007
Colleges Recruit with Pro-LGBT Message
CHARLOTTE, December 4, 2007 –This past weekend thirty colleges from across the United States came out to recruit high school youth and highlight their programs and services for lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) people. The national East Coast fair took place this past Satuday, December 1 on the campus of University of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia.Very encouraging news! And, it's great to see that University System of Maryland was represented with Towson University attending! I attended Towson for one semester and am proud to see that it is involved in LGBT outreach.
...
The thirty colleges who participated in the East Coast fair were: Bucknell University, Columbia University, Connecticut College, Williams College, Eugene Lang College, Georgetown University, Goucher College, Illinois Institute of Technology, Lehigh University, Lewis & Clark College, Alfred University, Barnard College, Binghamton State University of New York, Michigan Tech, Syracuse University, Swarthmore College, Roosevelt University, Pennsylvania State University, Washington & Lee University, Monmouth University, Towson University, Princeton University, Brandeis University, Marymount Manhattan College, Emory University, University of Utah, University of Texas Austin, Hofstra University and University of Pennsylvania.
Monday, December 3, 2007
LGB(T?) Greek Life study
The Lambda 10 Project, an educational initiative of Campus Pride, released results and a set of strategic recommendations from the first-ever national formal research exploring the LGBT experience within fraternities and sororities from 1960 to 2007.The press release about the new research, which can be found here, states the following:
This is an intriguing study, but I have a qualm. The use of the acronym "LGBT" seems like the most inclusive way to address our community these days, but if you aren't talking about transgender people, then don't imply you are.Results published in the Lambda 10 Project report suggest that fraternity and sorority organizations are more welcoming of LGB members today than in the past. Over 75% of the respondents were "out" to members of their fraternity/sorority, with current undergraduates reporting that they were more "out" (83%) than their alumni/ae counterparts (25%). The study also indicated the main reason LGBT people join fraternities and sororities are for "friendship" and that a significant number of these students are involved as leaders in their respective chapters.
"Overall the research is very encouraging and echoes the change in attitudes from younger generations to be more open-minded and inclusive of LGBT people," said Sue Rankin, Ph.D., the lead researcher for the study. "However, as the results suggest, we still have some work to do given that over 50% of current undergraduate (n=98) respondents reported that the climate within their chapters was somewhat homophobic."
Here is something to consider about the Lambda 10 project, also from the press release:
The report released today by the Lambda 10 Project is the first-ever formal research of its kind and the largest national study to date. The research builds on the data from an informal assessment published by Case (1995). Four hundred and forty people who self-identified as either current or past fraternity and sorority members responded to the call to participate in February 2006. The participants included 347 men, 88 women and one transgender person.ONE transgender person?? ONE?
I question whether this report should be called "Experiences of LGBT People in Fraternities & Sororities." Maybe just LGB?
Either way, should be an interesting read!