Death of the Ayn Rand Scholar Gray Cavender (motivational novels for students .TXT) š
- Author: Gray Cavender
Book online Ā«Death of the Ayn Rand Scholar Gray Cavender (motivational novels for students .TXT) šĀ». Author Gray Cavender
Jillian turned back to Wes. āI hope thatās OK. There are a couple of things I want to ask herā¦about Professor Siemens AND about Professor Keefer. I thought I could double back here after the demonstration. And, after I talk with her, Iāll text Grace Wilson. By then, she should know who the new chair of English will be. I donāt know if thatās relevant, but stillā¦ā
āAll good, Jilly. And after the demo, Iāll head back to HQ and talk with the Chiefā¦sheāll want to be in the loop. Iāll also call Al to see if thereās any scuttlebutt on Davidosā¦as a womanizerā¦really, on any front. Al is usually an āin the knowā kind of a guy. Iād like to know whatās what before we schedule a follow-up interviewā¦because, I suspect that this will generate some push-back. Iām not saying we shouldnāt re-interview Davidosā¦just that we want to get our ducks in a row first. Sound like a plan?
āSounds like a plan.ā
āBy the way, Professor Szabo, whereās she from? I couldnāt quite place the accent,ā he said, as he tugged at his earlobe.
āYes, I knowā¦itās hard to pinpoint. OK, well, sheās originally from Hungary, but went to grad school in FranceāParis, of courseā¦ā
Wes laughed, āWell, of courseā¦ā
She smiled and continued, āAnd this is interesting, Wesā¦sheās of Roma heritageāher dad, I think. She also lived in Spain for a while. I know she speaks Hungarian and Romani. But, sheās fluent in a bunch of languages.
āRomani, wow, thatās interesting. Howād she end-up at ASU?ā
āI know some of the answerā¦but some is only hearsay.ā She took a big sip of tea. āOK, several years ago, a few really well-respected scholars started writing about what they called āSouthern theory.ā
Wes gestured that he didnāt understand.
āSo, most scholars whoāve written about society, about government and politicsā¦whatever, have been from the northern hemisphereā¦the US, the UK, France, and so onāand really thatās what theyāre writing about as well. Anyway, it was a big deal when some scholars started writing about theorists from the southern hemisphere, people whose ideas and research were about those regions.ā
Wes nodded that he understood, so she continued. āOnly problem wasā¦almost all of the southern theorists these men wrote about also were men.ā
āOops,ā Wes said.
āExactly. Anyway, what ZZ didāProfessor Szaboāis that her doctoral dissertation was about southern theoriesā¦from WOMEN in those regions. ā
Wes asked, āAnd this was a big deal, why?ā
āWell, in the first place, because she did it at all. She gave voice to some amazing women theorists whose voices had not been heard, at least not in the northern hemisphere. And second, she did a phenomenal job of it. She was thorough, she was thoughtful, and she discussed agreements and disagreements among these theorists, and, she contrasted them with the southern male theorists.ā
Jillian ate her a last bite of her sandwich, took a sip of tea, and used her napkin. āZZ pretty quickly turned her dissertation into a book that was originally published in French, then translated into English and other languages, too, I think. She won a lot of academic awards for the book.ā
āAnd thatās when ASU hired her?ā
āNot yet. As soon as she earned her PhD, Wellesley College snapped her upā¦the book was published about the same timeā¦and translated into the other languages.ā
Jillian continued and was very demonstrative with her hands. āThen, almost immediately, she published a companion volume, an anthology of articles actually written by many of these southern hemisphere women. But, this was more than just a compilation of articlesā¦ZZ introduced each theorist with a discussion that put them in perspective. It was very originalā¦like her dissertation.
āI take it that youāve read these books?ā
āYes, I had a graduate seminar with her, and we read them then.ā
āBut, when does ASU enter the picture?ā
āWell, this is the part thatās more gossipy.ā
āIām all ears,ā Wes said, and rubbed his hands together. āTalk on.ā
āItās my understanding that President Davidos heard ZZ speak at a conference, and he was really impressed. So, he set out to hire her. He had someoneāa VP, a Dean, I donāt really knowāput together a very attractive offer for her. Sheād only been out of graduate school for maybe three years, and Wellesley had already tenured her and promoted her to Associate Professor, so, ASU promised her a quick promotion to full professor and a fairly large salary, which they justified by offering to make her the head of a humanities methodology center on campus. ASU could pay her a larger salary by making her an administrator, right?ā
Wes nodded. āAdministrators get a calendar year salary, not the 10 month salary that most professors earn.ā
āYes, exactly. Exceptā¦ā Jillian paused for emphasis, āZZ said no. She would not be an administrator. Someone told me that when ZZ turned-down the offer, she told ASU that Americans were fixated on being administrators. And get this, Wes, she cited Mick Jagger as her source for this criticism.ā
Wes laughed so hard that he choked on his tea. When he finally stopped coughing, he said, āI love it.ā
āThought you would. Anyway, ZZ declined to be an administrator, but said that to come to ASU, sheād still want the salary that was originally offered, which threw a lot of people into a tizzy.ā
āAnd yet, she is here. What happened to break the log jam?ā
āThe U of A.ā Jillian held up a hand before Wes could speak, and continued. āApparently, President Davidos had cooled on ZZ when she declined the administrative post...untilā¦ā she paused, then continued, āā¦he heard that the U of A was actively recruiting her. As soon as he heard that, he waved his presidential wand, the original offer was reinstated and she was hired...on her termsā¦the higher salary, without the administrative duties.ā
āItās the Territorial Cup,ā Wes laughed again.
āI donāt understand,ā Jillian said. āWhatās a Territorial Cup?ā
āOK, every year, ASU plays the U of A in the last regularly scheduled football game of the season. And, the winner of the game is awarded the Territorial Cupā¦you know, our status before becoming a stateā¦The
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