Windy City Media Group Frontpage News Home
CELEBRATING 25+ YEARS OF Lesbian Gay Bisexual and Transgender NEWS

Search Gay News Articles
Advanced Search
Gay News Sponsor Windy City Times 2012-05-23
Download Issue
  News Index   About Us   WCMG Info   Publications   QueerCast   AIDS @ 30   Videos   Advertisers   Events/Lists   OUT! Guide   Classifieds
 Local | National | World | Politics | Obits | Profiles | Views | Entertainment | Theater | Dance | Music | Film | Art | Books | TV/Gossip
 Travel | History | Marriage | Youth | Trans | Lesbian | Celebrations | Food | Nightlife | Sports | Health | Real Estate | Autos | Pets | Crime

Restaurant show features something for everyone Restaurant show features something for everyone
\The National Restaurant Association (NRA) show took place May 5-8 at McCormick ...

Browse Gay News Index   Browse Gay News Archives
  Windy City Times    Download PDF Issue

Univ. of Chicago aims to be site for gender and sexuality studies
by Kate Sosin, Windy City Times
2012-02-08

Monica Mercado. Photo by Kate Sosin


When the University of Chicago founded its gender studies department in 1996, it trailed other colleges and universities in doing so by about two decades. It is perhaps no surprise then that the prestigious school never became a target for gender studies majors.

However the Center for the Study of Gender and Sexuality, an old campus house wedged into a muddy lot at 5733 S. University Ave., is abuzz this year with change.

The center is going after a reputation as destination school for LGBT and women's studies. That effort started with adopting a new name last summer (it was formerly called the Center for Gender Studies), will continue with the hosting of lesbian comic writer Alison Bechdel and will stretch over the next three years as the campus begins recording its LGBT history for the first time.

"We're trying to make the center more visible," said Director Linda Zerilli.

That has meant updating the name of the center to highlight work on LGBT lives and history, which faculty members say the department has engaged with since the department's inception. The inclusion of the word "sexuality" is more about acknowledging current work than changing course, said Zerilli.

The shift happened over the summer of 2011, without resistance from community members—a surprise to some who thought that feminists might worry about the role of women's studies in a growing and more inclusive department. Other project names that bore the name "gay and lesbian" have also been updated to include the full LGBT.

Part of growing its visibility for LGBT life and studies in the future, will be an effort to look back at the school's past. In March, the center in launching its "Closeted in the Quadrangles" project (the "quadrangles" refer to a part of campus), a three-year oral-history project aimed recording the school's LGBT history from the early twentieth century through the present.

In the coming years, the center will be working to supplement its lack of archival records with oral testimony from LGBT people who experienced the campus in decades past.

Monica Mercado, a graduate student in history, is kicking off that effort in her Spring undergraduate class. Over the course of the quarter, approximately 12 students will begin digging through the university's archives and through its rolodex. Students will be contacting alums and past community members in hopes of recording a history of the institution not yet on paper.

The task is not an easy one, said Mercado.

"We're really starting from scratch," she said. "If I walked over to the archives in Regenstein Library right now, I wouldn't find anything [on LGBT history at the university]."

Mercado speculates that historical LGBT documents on the university exist, but that few have made their way into the archives. Gathering up oral histories may dig up some of those lost records, she said.

"I think that people don't realize that what they have is valuable," Mercado said.

The project is hardly business-as-usual for a department that works to bring in some of the more current names in LGBT and women's studies. The department will host Alison Bechdel, cartoonist behind "Fun Home: A Family Tragicomic" and "Dykes to Watch Out For," this spring. It is also home to English and gender-studies titan Lauren Berlant. It regularly hosts talks, programs and workshops, including a recent talk with controversial feminist figure Catharine MacKinnon.

Looking back into the LGBT past has not always been the focus, said Mercado. The oral-history project will change that.

"In some ways, it's not a super-sexy project," she said. "Most of what we do here is very current."

The project was inspired by another successful undertaking from the department that completed in 2009 when students compiled women's oral histories from the university. That project included between 80 to 90 interviews and culminated in the thin, glossy book "On Equal Terms."

But the challenges facing the LGBT oral history project will be steeper. For one, the project will rely on alumni relations to outreach to former students. With the women's oral history project, contacting right alums was simply a matter of looking up women who attended the college. With the LGBT history project, determining where to start looking means figuring out who identifies as LGBT to begin with.

It's an issue that Christopher Hoover, an undergraduate student in the department ran into when he started working on his thesis. The fourth-year is studying people often derogatorily deemed "lesbians until graduation" and "gay until graduation." Hoover uses the terms "LUG" and "GUG" for short.

Hoover wanted to interview people who had identified as LGBTQ in college and then went on to have long-term heterosexual relationships or changed the way the identified to heterosexual.

However, finding people to interview was hardly easy. As expected, the university's alumni office thought his request to interview LUGs and GUGs was weird, and they declined to put the call out on through their networks. In the end, Hoover found seven people, all women, using other school resources to interview. His thesis will be completed later this year.

When he graduates, he will have the option of taking the department's new name in gender and sexuality studies on his diploma or keeping the old.

The building that houses that center, an odd mix between the Harry Potter-esque architecture of the university and the bare space-like updates that now adorn it, was quiet on a recent Thursday afternoon. Upstairs, longtime Affinity Community Services member Kelly Saulsberry—who is studying public policy at the university and working at the center—tapped away at a computer.

Mercado notes that when helping other students find the center, she often describes its proximity to the math building, well-known because an extra-alarm blaze burned through its roof in October, 2010.

The center itself, however, is less known on campus, something that Zerilli is determined to change.

"Gender studies has to create a lot of energy. ... This place just has to be an intellectual magnet," she said. "I think we're really rocking here now."

Upcoming events at the Center include a talk by Katherine Crawford entitled "Love Talk and Dirty Jokes: French Erotic Poetry and Masculinity in the Renaissance" Thursday, Feb. 9, 4:30—6:00 p.m., at Harper Memorial Library, Room 103. There's also a lecture by Jasbir Puar, "Homonationalism Gone Viral: The Affective Politics of Sensation," on Thursday, Feb. 16, 4:30—6:00 p.m., in the same venue.


Share this article:       del.icio.us digg facebook Email twitter
Windy City Media Group does not approve or necessarily agree with the views posted below.
Please do not post letters to the editor here. Please also be civil in your dialogue.
If you need to be mean, just know that the longer you stay on this page, the more you help us.

Chicago Sky coach Pokey Chatman looks ahead 2012-05-24
Chicago Sky marks Title IX, Girl Scouts anniversary 2012-05-24
Dirty Girl Mud Run in Chicago 2012-05-24
Affinity board president passes the torch 2012-05-23
L Stop anniversary party May 26 2012-05-23
Martha Shelley reflects on Stonewall, writing and activism 2012-05-23
Deaf Lesbian Festival coming to Chicago 2012-05-23
Force rocks Cleveland 2012-05-23
Ohio maverick wins right to wear t-shirt 2012-05-21
Ogletree Scholarship recipient graduates from Vanderbilt 2012-05-19
Dyke March safety marshall training, May 24 2012-05-17
Vicci Martinez releases "Come Along" 2012-05-16
Sexy Baby to benefit Gay and Lesbian Hall of Fame June 6 2012-05-16
Gay Indiana teen expelled for having stun gun 2012-05-16
Buzz continues at Notre Dame as graduation nears 2012-05-16
Dyke March talking community relations in Uptown 2012-05-16
Lesbian writer/activist Jeanne Cordova looks back at her life 2012-05-16
Augie/C.K.'s reunion: cheers, hugs, tears 2012-05-16
Holly Near and Toshi Reagon: On careers, Chicago show 2012-05-16
Teammates on the field, partners off 2012-05-16
Chicago Gay and Lesbian Hall of Fame's first Celebrity Bowl 2012-05-16
Force breezes by Mayhem 2012-05-16
Chicago Gay and Lesbian Hall of Fame plans Celebrity Bowl 2012-05-16
Museum hosts queer prom 2012-05-16
AIDS advocates hold protest at Hershey's 2012-05-15
Chicago students highlight LGBT youth issues with online video 2012-05-12
L Stop anniversary party 2012-05-12
Romney delivering commencement address at school that bans gay students 2012-05-11
Guthrie tribute show to feature Holly Near, Toshi Reagon 2012-05-09
Artemis Singers show June 2 2012-05-09
Polk Foundation leaders to retire; Evette Cardona to be VP Programs 2012-05-09
Hillary Clinton's upcoming honor; Canadian lesbian couple must share sperm 2012-05-09
Chicago Sky announces broadcast schedule 2012-05-08
Lavender Graduation has largest class yet 2012-05-02
Chicago Force routs Indy Crash 2012-05-02
More LGBT-related fallout at Notre Dame 2012-05-02
Cheng talks queer theology 2012-05-02
Vernita Gray talks history, racism in 'Fireside Chat' 2012-04-26
LGBTQ youth break silence at Night of Noise 2012-04-25
Lesbian-produced doc at Siskel May 5-7 2012-04-25





Copyright © 2012 Windy City Media Group. All rights reserved.
Reprint by permission only. PDFs for back issues are downloadable from
the online archives. Single copies of back issues in print form are
available for $4 per issue, older than one month for $6 if available,
by check to the mailing address listed below.

Return postage must accompany all manuscripts, drawings, and
photographs submitted if they are to be returned, and no
responsibility may be assumed for unsolicited materials.
All rights to letters, art and photos sent to Nightspots
(Chicago GLBT Nightlife News) and Windy City Times (a Chicago
Gay and Lesbian News and Feature Publication) will be treated
as unconditionally assigned for publication purposes and as such,
subject to editing and comment. The opinions expressed by the
columnists, cartoonists, letter writers, and commentators are
their own and do not necessarily reflect the position of Nightspots
(Chicago GLBT Nightlife News) and Windy City Times (a Chicago Gay,
Lesbian, Bisexual and Transegender News and Feature Publication).

The appearance of a name, image or photo of a person or group in
Nightspots (Chicago GLBT Nightlife News) and Windy City Times
(a Chicago Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual and Transgender News and Feature
Publication) does not indicate the sexual orientation of such
individuals or groups. While we encourage readers to support the
advertisers who make this newspaper possible, Nightspots (Chicago
GLBT Nightlife News) and Windy City Times (a Chicago Gay, Lesbian
News and Feature Publication) cannot accept responsibility for
any advertising claims or promotions.

 

 

 


 
 

Chaka's tribute to Whitney; Matthew McConaughey on stripper role
 
Celebrity trainer Jim Karas on Hugh Jackman, banning marathons
 
Adam Lambert, Iglesias among acts at Allstate show
 
Va. rejects gay man as judge; 9-year-old protests hateful church
 
Gay man's multimedia company on the rise
 
Windy City Times Current DownloadNightspots Current DownloadQueercast Current Download
Windy City Media Group BlogsJoin Our Email List!Donate Now


  News Index   About Us   WCMG Info   Publications   QueerCast   AIDS @ 30   Videos   Advertisers   Events/Lists   OUT! Guide   Classifieds
 Local | National | World | Politics | Obits | Profiles | Views | Entertainment | Theater | Dance | Music | Film | Art | Books | TV/Gossip
 Travel | History | Marriage | Youth | Trans | Lesbian | Celebrations | Food | Nightlife | Sports | Health | Real Estate | Autos | Pets | Crime


About WCMG      Contact Us      Online Front  Page      Windy City  Times      Nightspots      OUT! Guide     
Identity      BLACKlines      En La Vida      Archives      Subscriptions      Distribution      Windy City Queercast     
Queercast Archives      Advertising  Rates      Seasonal  Promotions      Deadlines      Advanced Search     
Press  Releases      Event Photos      Join WCMG  Email List      Email Blast     
Events      Todays Events      Ongoing  Events      Post an Event      Bar Guide      Community  Groups      In Memoriam      Outguide Categories      Outguide Advertisers      Search Outguide      Travel      Dining Out      Blogs      Spotlight  Video      News Videos      Nightspots Videos      Entertainment Videos      Queercast Videos      Comedy Videos     
Classifieds      Real Estate      Personals      Place a  Classified     

Windy City Media Group produces Windy City Queercast, and publishes Windy City Times,
The Weekly Voice of the Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual and Trans Community,
Nightspots, Out! Resource Guide, and Identity.
5315 N. Clark St. #192, Chicago, IL 60640-2113 • PH (773) 871-7610 • FAX (773) 871-7609.