WIC/WRC Videos E-F
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Earth Explorer: Geophysicist Marcia
McNutt
Geophysicist Marcia McNutt sees science as a giant jigsaw
puzzle: "When
the pieces fit together, it's so much fun!" The "pieces" that
she's working on now include a study of a critical juncture beneath Lake Mead,
Nevada, where the earth's geological plates are pulling away from each other.
Our continent is literally "falling apart before our very eyes" says
McNutt, and she believes that North America may split into two separate continents.
The profile follows McNutt as she studies hidden forces. The program also shows
the human face of a life in science. McNutt is a single parent, widowed five
years ago when her husband suddenly died, leaving her with three young daughters.
Her life involves a constant balancing of research and teaching at MIT, where
she's tenured professor in Earth Science Department, with children's piano
lessons and birthday parties. (60 min. 1995)
Eating Disorders
(WIC Luncheon Series)
Belinda Gosdanian, Staff Psychologist, Counseling Center; Bonnie Jackson, Nurse
Practitioner, Cutler Health Center; Adrienne White, Associate Professor of
Human Nutrition and Foods; Mitzi Clark, Undergraduate Student. Co-Sponsored
by the Eating Disorders Awareness Week Committee. (75 min. 2000)
Eavan Boland
Part of the Lannan Library Film Series. Eavan Boland is a major Irish poet,
and in her nine books of poetry she explores the relationship between gender,
art, and national identity. Boland read from In a Time of Violence and
Outside History. (60 min.)
Echoes of Dissent
In today's India, women are overwhelmed by confusion and conflict. Still bound
by tradition, yet swept along by the accelerating pace of modernization,
India's women face challenges and obstacles which are far more formidable
than those of their sisters in western society. The daily life of an Indian
woman is riddled with paradoxes arising from gender differences, marriage
and family, and societal roles. Echoes of Dissent is a discerning examination
of these realities. Prominent personalities in education, psychology, and
the arts address the issues in candid interviews, while subtle images of
everyday life speak volumes by themselves. Shot in Kerala, this film is
an engaging and thoughtful study of the need for positive change in Indian
society, and the voices of change which are beginning to be heard. (30
min. 1997)
Ecofeminism Now!
Using the context of the 1994 "Women and Ecology" conference hosted
by the Institute for Social Ecology, this documentary draws on interviews with
activists and scholars to create a portrait of ecofeminism as it is now, in
the 1990s. (37 min. 1996)
An Ecofeminist
Analysis of Violence in the Home
An on-campus lecture given by Carol J. Adams, a feminist activist who has worked
against homelessness, racism, domestic violence, and environmental destruction,
examines the role of the home as a locus of ethical behavior. Traditional patriarchy
has ignored the home, leaving it out of bounds for the discussion of ethics.
As a result, it has become a place where both male privilege and human privilege
are protected. Part of the Women in Curriculum Lunch Series and Women's History
Celebration. (90 min. 1996)
The Edge of
Each Other's Battles: The Vision of Audre Lorde
This video by Jennifer Abod is about Audre Lorde's broad social vision and
the translation of that vision into a historic transnational conference, which
used her work, while celebrating her life. Audre Lorde (1934-1993) has been
intrinsically important to the development of second wave U.S. feminism. She
consistently challenged racism, sexism, classism and homophobia, serving as
a catalyst for change within and among social movements, in which she herself
participated: Black Arts and Black Liberation, Women's Liberation, and Lesbian
and Gay Liberation. A staunch internationalist, she connected women across
the U.S.A., the Caribbean, Europe, South Africa, Australia, and New Zealand.
She died in 1992 after a courageous 14 year struggle against breast and liver
cancer. (60 min.)
The Education and
Status of Women at U Maine: 1972, 1987, and Today
A WIC Lunch Series discussion by members of two task forces (1972 and 1987)
and members of the present President's Council on Women. (75 min. 1988)
Educational
Apartheid in Maine: The Maine Indian Experience
Donna Loring, Penobscot Representative to the Maine State Legislature, has
recently submitted a bill to require all schools in Maine to teach Maine Indian
history. She offers her perspectives on how issues facing Indians in Maine
affect women and reflects on what roles women are taking in response. part
of the Women in the Curriculum Lunch Series and the Women's History Celebration.
(2001)
Eileen Atkins as
Virginia Woolf --"A Room of One's Own"
From the book by Virginia Woolf. This video is taken from
the celebrated British television distillation of the performance
that has been seen in America on "Masterpiece
Theatre." Virginia Woolf's "A Room of One's Own" has had an
epic impact on civilized minds since its publication in book form 52 years
ago. A vivid theatrical thunderbolt of common sense, passionate irony and flashing
wit, the work survives in strength, humor, and beauty as a clarion call to
women of the world to declare their independence, talent, and freedom to write,
think, love and labor, controlling their own destinies, yet realizing necessary
communion on all levels between men and women. The brilliant actress, Eileen
Atkins, in an unforgettable portrayal, has now made "A Room of One's Own" an
unforgettable achievement of her own. (55 min.)
Einstein's
Wife
When Albert Einstein died in 1955 he left behind a remarkable scientific legacy,
and an extraordinary secret. In 1986 love letters were discovered which revealed
a marriage hidden in the shadows for more than 30 years. Before moving to America
in 1933 with his second wife and first cousin Elsa, Einstein had married his
university sweetheart and scientific collaborator Mileva Maric. Einstein, contrary
to popular belief, did not work alone in the years leading to the great scientific
achievements of 1905. Maric, a brilliant mathematician, collaborated with him
on three famous works. Until now this collaboration was erased from history.
Einstein's Wife pieces together a partnership of extraordinary passion and
intellect that led to one of the greatest theoretical breakthroughs in the
twentieth century. (60 min. 2003)
Eleanor Roosevelt:
Crusade for Freedom In the Fascist Era
The 1996 Howard B. Schonberger memorial lecture, given by Blanche Wiesen Cook.
Cook is an author, scholar of the year (1996), and professor at the City University
of New York. Cook discusses Eleanor Roosevelt's aggressive freedom activism
after her term as First Lady. (90 min. 1996)
Eleanor Roosevelt:
The American Experience
Drawing on interviews with her closest surviving relatives, friends, and biographers,
combined with rare home movie footage, this video explores the life of one
America's most influential women. (150 min. 2000)
Ella Baker
and the Writing of Black Feminist Biography: A Conversation
Between sisters Living and Dead
WIC/WST Spring 2004 Lunch Series. 2-18-04.
Embracing Our Sexuality
This is a compelling look into the conversations of nine women who gather together
for a weekend retreat to talk about sexuality. The women range in age from
their 20¹s to their 70¹s and come from diverse racial backgrounds
and sexual orientations. The women talk frankly about sexual orientation,
menstruation, masturbation, sexual fantasies, orgasms and the effect of
AIDS and sexual abuse in their lives. (45 min. 19XX)
Emma Goldman:
The Anarchist Guest
Vilified by her enemies as "Red Emma", a dangerous
radical - but adored by her friends and comrades. Abrasive
- but charming. A self-centered autocrat - but freedom-loving
democrat. Complex and paradoxical, Emma Goldman was one of
the 20th century's most fascinating political figures. Departed
from the U.S., Goldman spent much of her life in exile, constantly on the move.
In Canada, she found a home. (41 min. 2000)
Empowerment Through
Tradition: Janakpuv Women's Development Center
This film was created by Satyam Barakoti, an Undergraduate
student in WST as part of the Women's History Celebration 2002.
(2.27.02 45 min.)
English and Algonquin
Women in the Age of Homespun
Part of the Women in the Curriculum Lunch Series. Laurel
Thatcher Ulrich is a James Duncan Professor of History, Professor
of Women's Studies, and Director of the Charles Warren Center
for Studies in American History at Harvard University. She
is the author of "A Midwife's Tale," the 1999-2000
class book. (4/12/00)
The Environment:
What's Gender Got To Do With It?
An on-campus lecture by Dr. Joni Seager. Seager is an Assistant
Professor of Geography at the University of Vermont. Seager
applies feminist analysis in an attempt to ascertain the
true agency at the heart of our environmental difficulties.
She argues that by focusing on what she terms "proximate problems," such
as ozone depletion and acid rain, we miss asking more important questions,
such as what forces or agency is responsible for global environmental degradation.
(75 min. 1993)
Environmental Racism, Living Democracy
Robert Bullard discusses environmental racism and the environmental justice movement’s role in redefining environmentalism to include where we live, work, play, and worship; also redefining the movement as an inclusive, multi-ethnic struggle for environmental and economic justice rather than the exclusive domain of a white middle class. Vandana Shiva criticizes the inequality and bankrupt policies of the IMF and WTO. She describes the Living Democracy movement in India which is about the earth family--every being having the right to democratic participation in the resources of this planet. (50 minutes, VHS)
Ernestine: Peak
Experiences
Classic #1: On December 29, 1969, Ernestine sat down at the
Laugh-In switchboard: "Have
I reached the party to whom I am speaking ?" She became on overnight sensation. "Mr.
Veedle" is the classic monologue that introduced Ernestine to American
audiences.
Classic #2: Before the divestiture, Ernestine was 'omnipotent.' "That's
'potent' with an 'omni' in front of it." Here on Saturday Night Live,
she wields her petty power: "We don't care. We don't have to -- we're
the phone company."
Classic #3: Ernestine has lost her power. She yearns to be a 'somebody', Ma
Bell has denied her the stardom she deserves. In a hilarious parody, she flashdances
her way up your funnybone.
Ethics and Scientific
Progress: Maxine Singer
Back in the early 1970s when scientists first learned to manipulate the living
gene, they put a moratorium on some kinds of molecular experiments to give
themselves time to think about what they were doing and set some guidelines
for the research. Now genetic research is in full swing as scientists work
on projects ranging from developing more fertile chickens to curing cancers.
In this program with Bill Moyers, Dr. Maxine Singer, the geneticist, discusses
her concerns with the ethics of science, the dilemmas of choice, and the consequences
that so often accompany scientific progress. She also talked about the image
of scientists in our society and the ethics of genetic engineering. (30 min.
1995)
European Women
Activists: Feminism and the Politics of Memory
An on-campus lecture by Irena Klepfisz as part of the Women's History Celebration.
Klepfisz, a Jewish lesbian poet and Yiddish translator, reflects upon the lives,
politics, and Yiddish writing of Jewish women activists and intellectuals who
worked in Eastern Europe before World War II. (75 min. 1994)
An Evening with
Jacqueline Hall, Alice Kessler-Harris, Elizabeth Minnich
and Deborah Rosenfelt
This engaging discussion features the accumulated insight of four distinguished
scholars in Women's Studies. Dr. Hall specializes in Southern women's history,
Dr. Rosenfelt in building Women's Studies, Dr. Kessler-Harris in labor history
and women, and Dr. Minnich in philosophy and curriculum building. (90 min.
1991)
Everyone's
Child
The story of four siblings, Itai, Tamari, Norah, and Nhamo,
whose parents have both died of AIDS. The orphans are abandoned
by the other villagers, ignoring custom, because of the stigma
of AIDS. Without the means of supporting themselves, the
family inevitably disintegrates. But when the youngest boy,
Nhamo, is killed in a fire, the villagers finally realize
that, as the now familiar African proverb holds, "it takes a village to raise a child." (90
min. 1996)
Examining the Backlash
against Sexual Violence
An on-campus lecture given by psychologist and Auburn College Women's Studies
faculty member Barry Burkhart. Burkhart examines the compelling history of
public disclosure and consciousness of sexually violent crimes (abuse, rape,
and incest) inflicted up on women, and the ensuing backlash from the media,
professionals, and politicians. Part of Rape and Sexual Assault Awareness Week.
(75 min. 1996)
Excited, Angry,
Active, Vocal: Women Out Loud
This intriguing video was produced by the self-named "Video Virgins," a
team of undergraduate women at Swarthmore College as a project for a class
on Women in Documentary Film. The production features women answering the question: "What
issues that affect women make you excited, angry, active and/or vocal?" (30
min. 1993)
Expanding Your
Horizons
Donna Lisnik, a Presque Isle High School math teacher discusses
her "all
girl" math classes, the advantages to single-sex education. Lisnik lectures
on the differences between boys and girls and how we as educators, parents,
etc., should approach and acknowledge these differences. Part of the Spring
1996 Expanding Your Horizons Conference for middle school age girls. (60 min.
1996)
F
'The F-Word': A
Fresh and Funny Look at Feminism
An on-campus performance by the cast members of Sleeveless Theater. This engaging
presentation by a troupe of incredibly funny women from Northampton, MA, takes
a thoroughly tongue-in-cheek satirical look at the history of the women's movement
and feminism. (90 min. 1994)
The Fairer Sex?
ABC News Prime Time Live set out to discover whether there are daily difference in being a male versus a female in today's American society, particularly in the workplace. With the aid of hidden cameras and microphones, Julie and Chris, professional testers in their late 20s, helped in the investigation. They posed as two people who had just moved to a major urban center, two people getting established, looking for jobs, shopping for cars, even asking about playing golf at a public golf course. The results of their report about our attitudes and their consequences may surprise you. Perhaps the area that most seriously affects women's lives is gender bias in the workplace. Studies show that women are slower to advance than men and that, in many situations, women hit what is called the "glass ceiling." The results of Prime Time Live's investigation will either frustrate and anger you or not disturb you much at all. Chances are, responses will be divided according to gender. If you're not disturbed, think again because gender discrimination affects motivation and performance of both men and women. We live in a society in which gender stereotypes have been taken for granted. Yet more than half of the population faces discrimination on a daily basis. The challenge in the workplace is to eliminate discriminatory decisions and unwritten rules based on gender. Only then can men and women translate fairness into solid teamwork. (18 minutes, 1993, VHS)
Faith, Diligence and Fortitude: A Portrait of the Gloucester Fishermen's Wives Association
In 1969, a group of women from Gloucester, Massachusetts set out to make a difference in their community. Many were first generation Sicilian-Americans, few had much formal education beyond high school, and almost all were part of families that had spent generations harvesting the sea. Together, they would raise their voices to become one of the most effective grass-roots organizations in the country. Join founding members, political and religious leaders, journalists and others as they share the story of the Gloucester Fishermen's Wives Association and its incredible journey of political and social activism. Learn about the organizations's ongoing efforts to promote underutilized species, to preserve the habitat of the ocean and to protect the interest of the struggling fishing industry. Enjoy highlights from the August, 2001 dedication ceremony of the Gloucester Fishermen's Wives Memorial, as well as composer Robert Bradshaw's original work "Faith, Diligence and Fortitude."
(38 minutes, 2002, VHS Format)
Family Violence:
Debunking the Myths
Both adult victims and perpetrators help dispel several social myths about
family violence. (23 min.)
Fannie Lou Hamer
Using archival footage as well as on-camera interviews, this portrayal of Hamer,
who played a pivotal role in the Civil Rights Movement of the 1960s attempts
to recreate the movement as the activist lived it. (51 min. 1983)
The Female Alien:
Pulp Science Fiction's Legacy to Feminists
An on-campus slide lecture given by Robin Roberts, an Associate
Professor of American Studies and Women's Studies at Colby
College, and the author of A New Species: Gender and Science
in Science Fiction. Roberts argues that while science fiction
seems inhospitable to feminism at the outset; in actuality,
the nature of the genre allows for significant "radical revision and reclamation" on
the part of feminist authors. She focuses in particular on the character of
the powerful "female alien" or "woman ruler", which, despite
its retrogressive origins, is readily available for feminist appropriation
into more progressive storytelling. (75 min. 1994)
Female-Friendly
Science
An on-campus lecture by Sue Rosser. Rosser offers a number of suggestions on
how the teaching of science can be adjusted in order to attract groups who
have not historically been attracted to science -- primarily women and people
of color. (60 min. 1992)
Feminist Perspectives
on the Sciences as an Environmental Tool
An on-campus lecture by Dr. Joni Seager, Assistant Professor of Geography at
the University of Vermont. Seager posits that the sciences have come to assume
a position of primacy and influence in environmental problem-solving, a role
she believes could ultimately hinder our understanding of ecological crises
and recovery. She argues for a more limited role for the sciences in order
to better recognize the role culture and society play in environmental degradation.
(60 min. 1993)
Fighting For Our
Lives: Women Confronting AIDS
Produced by the Center for Women Policy Studies, this video
portrays the strengths and strategies of women of color who
are leaders in confronting HIV disease. It features six programs
and the women who lead them. Included with the video is an "Action Kit" which
contains suggestions on planning AIDS prevention educational
activities. (28 min. 1990)
Finding Annie
Farrell: A Maine Family Memoir
Guest speaker Beth Harpaz discusses her book. Part of the Women in the Curriculum
and Women's Studies Fall 2004 Lunch Series.
9-21-04.
Finding the Pulpit:
From Silence to Voice in Zora Neale Hurston's Their
Eyes Were Watching God
An on-campus lecture given by Dorothy Harris, Minority Dissertation Scholar,
University of Maine at Farmington, and Doctoral Candidate at SUNY Buffalo.
Harris discusses her work on Their Eyes Were Watching God, particularly the
character Janey. (75 min. 1997)
FIRE
Two dutiful Indian housewives, sisters-in-law in conservative New Delhi, are
neglected by their husbands: one man pursues spiritual enlightenment through
celibacy, the other spends nights with his Chinese mistress. Slowly, the
two women are drawn to each other erotically, and passion transforms them.
An intense, moving, and sensuous portrait of change in contemporary India,
Deepha Mehta's FIRE focuses on several generations of a modern-day New
Delhi family. A re-working of a story from the classic Hindu Ramayana,
FIRE recounts the family's struggles to cope with the pressures of greater
personal freedom while maintaining allegiance to traditional values. (104
min. 1998)
Fire Eyes
This powerful and important film is the first to present an African viewpoint
on a culturally explosive issue. Somali filmmaker Soraya Mire knows firsthand
about the traditional African practice of female genital mutilation. At
thirteen she was subjected to it, and spent the next twenty years recovering
physically and emotionally from its cruel legacy. This film explores the
socio-economic, psychological and medical consequences of this ancient
custom that affects more than 80 million women worldwide. (60 min. 1994)
The Floating Dungeon: A History of the Slave Ship
2007 Howard B. Schonberger Peace and Social Justice Memorial Lecture. Dr. Marcus Rediker, Professor of History, University of Pittsburgh. October 11, 2007. DVD and VHS format available.
Flowers for Guadalupe:
The Virgin of Guadalupe in the Lives of Mexican Women
This video explored the importance of the Virgin of Guadalupe
as a liberating symbol for Mexican women today. In this video,
twenty-three women speak out, in traditional testimony of
their experiences with the Virgin of Guadalupe as an evolving
symbol. The documentary follows an all-women's pilgrimage
from Queretaro state through several arduous but joyful days
as it weaves its way through difficult terrain, harsh weather
and congested streets to the Virgin's shrine in Mexico City.
The songs of Rosa Rartha Zarate, Mexico's "singing
nun," are included in this video. Produced by Judith Gleason with the
collaboration of the Colectivo Feminsta de Xalapa and Elisa Mereghetti. (57
min. 1995)
Flute Music
by Women Composers: Program of Music and History
Spring 2005 WIC/WST Lunch Series with Laura Artesani and Elizabeth Downing.
3-22-05.
Forbidden Love
Against a fascinating backdrop of book covers, tabloid headlines, archival
photos and film clips, the women interviewed paint a portrait of lesbian
sexuality and survival during the sexual Dark Ages of the 1950s and 1960s
in Canada. An interview with author Ann Bannon and the reminiscences of
the women who have read popular lesbian pulp novels bring to life the contrast
between their actual experiences and the way they were fictionalized in
popular lesbian pulp novels. The film also allows for a fascinating glimpse
at the formation and evolution of lesbian communities and social mores
in Vancouver, Toronto and Montral. (85 min. 1994)
For Colored Girls
Who Have Considered Suicide When the Rainbow Is Enuf
Part of the American Playhouse Series. A theatre production directed by Oz
Scott. Adapted from a Ntozake Shange novel, which deals with confronting being
a Black woman in America. (120 min. 1982)
The Fragile Promise
of Choice: Abortion in the United States Today
Part of the History of Abortion Trilogy, this video steers clear of graphic
scenes. Dorothy Fadiman presents a riveting glimpse into the lives of people
who must endure the increasingly violent atmosphere at women's clinics throughout
the country. (57 min. 1996)
Franco-American
Women - Pillars of Survivance
Claire Quintal discusses women as mothers, grandmothers, and teachers in parochial
schools were the ones who transmitted values and a mother tongue to the next
generation. Although they lived in the shadows, these women made survivance
happen unofficially and unobtrusively. Because of their commitment and sacrifice
they were successful at upholding and maintaining both a language and a traditional
way of life. Quintal, founder and director of the French Institute and Professor
of French at Assumption College, discusses why they did it and how they managed
in spite of many obstacles. (1999)
Franco-American
Women at the University of Maine: A Clash of Cultures?
An on-campus panel discussion held as part of the WIC Lunch
Series. This engaging discussion featured Mary Marin (Graduate
Assistant in Speech Communications), Lanette Landry Petrie
(Secretary, Employee Assistance Program), Kathleen Philbrick
(Undergraduate Student in Broadcast Journalism), Rhea C™t-Robbins
(Editor of Le Forum). Threse Boisvert Shipps (Assistant Professor of
Nursing). Kristin Langellier (Associate Professor of Speech Communication)
acts as moderator. (75 min. 1992)
Freaks, Fairies
and Fat Ladies: The Politics of Appearance
An on-campus lecture by Wendy Chapkis. In 1992, the state
of California passed an anti-bias law, in part to protect
from discrimination those whose sexual orientation or appearance
was not considered "normal." Chapkis, who
was instrumental in the development of what came to be known as the "looks
law," provides details of the law's history, as well as the inevitable
backlash and ridicule it faced. (120 min. 1992)
From Danger to
Dignity: The Fight for Safe Abortion
Part of the History of Abortion Trilogy, this documentary weaves together two
parallel stories: the evolution of underground networks which helped women
find safe abortions outside the law and the intensive efforts by activists
and legislators who dedicated themselves to legalizing abortion. Archival footage
brings history to life by documentation of the actions of those who broke the
silence and challenged the laws. (57 min. 1995)
From Ivory Tower
to Power Tower: How Women in Academic Administration Can
Arrive, Survive, and Make a Difference Part of the WIC Lunch
Series.
The speaker was Theo Kalikow, President, University of Maine, Farmington. (65
min. 1998)
From Policy to
Practice: Things We Never Knew About Women's Wages
An on-campus lecture delivered on 21 March 1988 by Alice Kessler-Harris. Part
of the Carolyn Colvin Lecture Series about the ideology of gender and how it
can be used for understanding women's pasts. (90 min. 1988)
From Settlers to
Newcomers: Latino(a)s in the Making of the United States:
Part I & II
An on-campus lecture given by Edna Acosta-Beln, Director
of the Center for Latino, Latin American, and Caribbean Studies,
University at Albany, SUNY and editor of several books on
research and curriculum transformation incorporating the
experiences of Latin American women. Part of the Multicultural
Women's Studies Institute. (90 min. 1998)
From Sun Up
From Sun Up is a candid, authentic picture of the dawn-to-dusk, life-giving,
life-sustaining effort of women to survive and prosper. It reflects the
condition of women everywhere, especially those in the Third World. Produced
by a Tanzanian woman, Flora M'mbugu, and shot in Tanzania by an all-African
crew, this beautifully photographed work portrays the woman's multiple
roles as provider, mother, water carrier, wood gatherer, cook and entrepreneur.
(28 min. 1987)
From Technocratic
to Holistic: Midwifery as a Catalyst for Change
Part of the WIC Lunch Series. Barbara Jill DeLuca, a local midwife, shares
her understanding of the birthing process as an intensely human and personal
experience, and ultimately not the medical procedure it is frequently perceived
as. DeLuca relates how Western cultural conceptions of the human body as mechanistic
in nature have resulted in most births taking place in hospital facilities,
and recommends home births as a means of allowing for a more holistic approach.
(75 min. 1994)
From the Jane Collective
to RU486: The Changing Context for Abortion
Part of the WIC Lunch Series. The speaker was Peaches Bass, Freelance Writer,
Public Health Activist, and former Jane Collective Member. This event was co-sponsored
by the National Young Women's Day of Action. (75 min. 1998)
Further Off the Straight & Narrow: New Gay Visibility on Television 1998-2006
This film provides a compelling and nuanced examination of television's portrayal of gays, lesbians, bisexuals, and transgender people. The film cautions that even as GLBT characters and plotlines have grown more prevalent and complex in recent years, these images and stories also continue to be shaped by narrow commercial imperatives. The film argues that the evolution of GLBT representations should be seen less as an indication of big media's sudden commitment to social justice, or as a sign that the struggle for gay equality has been won, than as a recognition of GLBT consumers and gay taste by advertisers and media conglomerates. Media Education Foundation, 61 minutes, DVD.
The Future
of Marriage Equality in New England: Massachusetts, Connecticut,
and Maine
Spring 2005 WIC/WST Lunch Series with Mary Bonauto. 4/6/05.
The Futures of
Women's Studies
Part of the Women in the Curriculum Lunch Series. Jacquelyn Zita, Chair of
Women's Studies at the University of Minnesota, speaks about the growth of
women's studies and the many directions it will take in the future. (5/2/00)
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