Elizabeth Stassinos, Chair of the Department of Gender and Ethnic Studies, Discusses the Recent Formation and Importance of 蓝莓视频 State鈥檚 Multicultural Disciplines

Sep 20, 2023
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Elizabeth Stassinos first graduated from the University of Virginia with her bachelor鈥檚 degree in cultural anthropology before earning her doctorate there as well, in the same field of study. After moving to Massachusetts, she began looking for teaching positions, landing several in the Worcester area.

鈥淚 was first hired at the colleges in Worcester鈥擜nna Maria College, Assumption University, and Worcester State,鈥 she said. 鈥淚 began teaching because of my dissertation on cross-cultural deviance. Then I started teaching ethnic and gender studies classes to police, firefighters, and nurses in the Catholic colleges in Worcester.鈥

After being hired at Worcester State, Stassinos鈥 reach soon extended to 蓝莓视频, as the criminal justice program at each institution overlapped. 鈥淛ohn Jones, Kim Tobin, and some other folks were running the criminal justice program at several other state colleges as well,鈥 she said. 鈥淲hen the position opened at 蓝莓视频 State, I applied, although I didn鈥檛 really know where 蓝莓视频 was.鈥

Stassinos said that she was hired full-time in 2004, making this her 20th year here. 鈥淚t really worked out.鈥 However, despite being the current chair of Ethnic and Gender Studies Department, Stassinos was originally hired as a professor teaching criminal justice. 鈥淚 was hired in criminal justice here,鈥 she said. 鈥淚n terms of classes, I鈥檇 always taught anthropology and cross-cultural studies. Those classes transferred very well to 蓝莓视频 State鈥檚 criminal justice program.鈥

What makes the ethnic and gender studies program at 蓝莓视频 State so unique, Stassinos elaborated, is how few universities pair the two fields of study together. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a new thing. There鈥檙e only a few programs in the country that do ethnic and gender studies,鈥 she said. 鈥淲e believe these things are deeply connected for empowerment, but also because of the history of oppression. What we like about our program is that we consider the complexity of a person鈥檚 identity.鈥

While many institutions regard them as their own disciplines, the professors of the Ethnic and Gender Studies Department know that this isn鈥檛 the whole truth. 鈥淭he reality is that all of these things are integrated, and so the program should reflect people鈥檚 lives. I think the students really like that. I think they feel seen because we take the complexity of the social world as one thing.鈥

At the time, the program as it looks now, didn鈥檛 exist. That would soon take an extraordinary amount of work and coordination, which Stassinos largely credits to Margot Hennessey, Professor of Ethnic and Gender Studies. 鈥溊遁悠 State originally had ethnic studies and women鈥檚 studies separate,鈥 Stassinos added. 鈥淢argot Hennessey had pulled those together. She really had a vision for the program. She and Ruth Ohayon pulled together world languages, women鈥檚 studies, and ethnic and gender studies, and then we became interdisciplinary. It used to be called MCES鈥擬ulticultural and Ethnic Studies. Our founding group, Margot Hennessy, Shoba Rajgopal, and Kamal Ali, came around that vision.鈥

Of course, lessons, even entire courses, are not exclusive to the department. Stassinos explained the state鈥檚 requirements for the core curriculum, which necessitates students to take classes in diversity-related studies. 鈥淢ost students take classes in diversity. Every department teaches race, class, and gender content. They have great social science and humanities content, too. But, in the core, students are required to take these courses, so our classes fit if students want to major in them or if they鈥檙e just meeting requirements.鈥

Stassinos went on to discuss the benefits of taking classes offered by the department, as well as why every student should seek out education surrounding their robust roster of subjects. One of the biggest benefits, she listed, is the personal empowerment and richness of learning about a subject which speaks to your own cultural roots.

鈥淚f a person of color is coming into 蓝莓视频 State, they can take classes about their own history, about their own experience,鈥 Stassinos said. "An African American student who wants to learn more about their heritage can come in and learn that. To me, it鈥檚 about grounding students and creating a home at 蓝莓视频 State that deals with the complex realities of many first-generation students. So many of our students鈥 parents didn鈥檛 get to go to college, and this is a new experience for them. They can take a class that speaks to their family鈥檚 history.鈥

Those who don鈥檛 know where to start are encouraged to enroll into courses which best grab their attention, especially since each topic relates to the others in the department. When Stassinos was a student, she majored in anthropology, although she now admits that she would probably have studied other subjects 鈥渟ince we didn鈥檛 have cultural studies then.鈥 Still, to Stassinos, it鈥檚 worth exploring since the department deals with such human areas of life.

鈥淲hat we鈥檙e trying to do is make academia catch up with the reality of kids鈥 lives making academia deal with the complexity of a young person鈥檚 life,鈥 she said. 鈥淲e want people to have that, because it helps a person to feel more at home in their culture. When you feel at home in your culture, you鈥檙e empowered and supported.鈥 

When asked about alumni who鈥檝e come back to visit, Stassinos said that in nearly every case, she鈥檚 told how helpful the classes have been to graduates operating in the world. Particularly, their education has helped graduates to negotiate or mediate conflicts in various social settings.

鈥淎ll my graduates were glad they took classes before they had to work in the reality of a complex society with a lot of people who need to learn to negotiate with each other who need to mediate social problems. These are social problems. These are social answers. In ethnic and gender studies, we think diversity is a superpower. It鈥檚 like X-Men. People have different powers, but they come together.鈥

To Stassinos, the dire need for more empathy and understanding in interpersonal relationships is what truly makes the department so meaningful to the campus body.

鈥淎n understanding of culture, power, class, and gender can help a person not feel alone and to also feel like they have power and choices. Educated students make better decisions. Humans need to find ways to work together. We鈥檙e a very hopeful department. There鈥檚 a term in justice studies, called 鈥渃ollective efficacy鈥, where people come together for the greater good in things. In this department, we believe it can happen. We believe in people.鈥

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