Browsing by Subject "Sexual Assault"
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Item The Law of Historical Memory(2017-01) Lecuona, Adriana; MFA in Creative NonfictionExperimenting with various shifts of narrative address, The Law of Historical Memory is a memoir in four parts that examines the fragmentation of my selfhood and my family relationships. I reflect upon the past through the lens of my post-cancer period of Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder as, during that period, the new, healthier relationship I had developed with my body incurred a greater sense of its communicative abilities. I discovered that my body held memories I could not see but feared greatly—so much so that I feared dying more after cancer. When I discovered that my adolescent journals revealed repressed experiences, every false conception I had of myself and of my family was shattered. Ultimately, by uncovering the truth, I healed as an integrated self. This thesis represents excerpts from Part 3: The Kitchen Sink and Part 4: The Pact of Forgetting.Item Receive, Respond, Report: Faculty Experiences with Students' Disclosures of Sexual Assault(2020-01-20) Stone, Jaclyn; Chapin, Bambi; Mallinson, Christine; Language, Literacy & Culture; Language Literacy and CultureSexual violence is a pervasive problem at institutions of higher education, contributing to a hostile environment that impedes institutional missions and individuals' success. Institutions are challenged to comply with regulations and laws, while responding to the needs of their communities. The purpose of this study was to understand the experiences of faculty members as recipients of student disclosures of sexual violence. By applying ecological systems theory (Bronfenbrenner, 1979) which situates the complex interplay of individual and institutional relationships and social and cultural values as interdependent, I sought to understand the contexts in which disclosures occurred and how such factors informed faculty responses. I endeavored to understand the ways in which institutional betrayal influenced faculty members' perceptions of responsibilities and the actual enactment of those duties. In order to understand faculty responses to disclosures of sexual assault, I conducted and analyzed interviews with 16 faculty members from six Maryland universities, contextualized by institutional observations and professional campus experience. I found that key to understanding faculty experiences of receiving disclosures was their perception of their role as mediators between the institution and students. Faculty members' beliefs about the extent to which they should work in compliance with or in opposition to institutional policies, in combination with their understanding of the purpose of such policies and practices, informed their beliefs and actions with students. Participants demonstrated limited knowledge of policy and a disconnect between what they believed they were required to do as responsible employees and what they actually did when faced with disclosures. Moreover, whether in their instructional or advisory roles, faculty interacted with students based on the extent of their role-based intimacy with a disclosing student, as demonstrated through their pedagogical and relational approaches and their balancing of care for students and obligations to policy. This work demonstrates that institutions could benefit from understanding faculty experiences through an ecological systems framework as they aim to craft policies and practices that more effectively support survivors while remaining compliant with laws. Increased responsiveness to nuanced circumstances, transparency, and a culture of trust surrounding sexual assault disclosures and responses is critical to institutional-level change.