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Teh One Who Knocks
05-08-2018, 12:06 PM
Neetu Chandak, New York Senior Campus Correspondent - Campus Reform


https://i.imgur.com/wtqLC1ul.jpg

A Cornell University student presented her honors thesis while wearing only her undergarments last week in an effort to stand against “oppressive beliefs and discrimination.”

Letitia Chai conducted her presentation on May 5 as a response to an earlier incident in which her Acting in Public professor Rebekah Maggor questioned the appropriateness of her attire in class. About half of the attendees stripped to boxers and bras in solidarity, The Cornell Daily Sun reported.

In a May 2 Facebook post, Chai recounted wearing a “long-sleeve blue button-down shirt and denim cut-offs.” She then noted that she was in “disbelief” when the professor criticised her outfit.

“When I got up to start, my professor said: ‘Is that really what you would wear?’” Chai wrote. “She, a white woman, continued: ‘Your shorts are too short.’”

“The professor proceeded to tell me, in front of my whole class, that I was inviting the male gaze away from the content of my presentation and onto my body,” the student recounted. “She said I was making a statement by wearing my outfit. I told her that I sure as hell wouldn’t change my statement to make her or anyone else feel more comfortable.”

The post also took issue with an international student who was present during the class and who appeared to defend the professor's remarks.

“Then, an international student (man) said that I should have more respect for the audience and that it was a moral obligation to dress more conservatively,” she wrote. “Needless to say, I was shook.”

According to Chai, Maggor explained that her intentions were coming from a mother’s concern, which Chai proudly dismissed by stressing that her mother “is a Feminist, Gender, Sexuality Studies professor,” and would not be concerned with her outfit.

“I think my mother would be fine with my shorts,” she wrote.

In an interview with the Daily Sun, Maggor pointed out that she also asked a student in another section of her class to remove a cap from his head to follow the dress policy.

According to the course syllabus, students were required to dress “appropriately for the persona you will present.”

“For example, how would you dress for a specific job interview?” The document reads. “How would you dress when introducing a famous speaker at a particular conference? How would you dress to give a speech at a protest rally?”

Eleven of the 14 students in the class felt that Chai’s post did not represent the entire situation fairly. In a joint letter, the students recounted that the professor’s comment “was a means of noting the importance of professionalism in certain public speaking situations.”

The letter goes on to explain that the professor repeatedly apologized for her word choice and agreed that the “notion of ‘short shorts’ on women carry a lot of cultural and political baggage.”

Many of the students acknowledged that they were afraid to speak against Chai’s post because of “social media’s tendency to radically conform to one narrative and to portray situations in black and white.”

According to the document, the three students who did not sign the letter included Chai, the international student, and a student who was absent on the day of the incident.

On Monday, Chai also shared an email exchange with the Chair of the Performing Media Arts, Nick Salvato, in which the official promised that diversity, equity, and inclusion training for faculty will “continue this semester, as well as next semester and beyond.”

Maggor did not immediately respond to Campus Reform’s request for comment.

Goofy
05-08-2018, 12:13 PM
Pics or gtfo :hand:

Teh One Who Knocks
05-08-2018, 12:29 PM
You're oppressing her :nono:

And: :rapeculture:

DemonGeminiX
05-08-2018, 12:39 PM
Hiring managers all over the country will keep her in the back of their minds.

RBP
05-08-2018, 01:18 PM
You'll look fine in the required Starbucks uniform, assuming you dress appropriately for the interview.

This idea that standards can be individual means that there are no standards. If there are no standards, there is no society.

Teh One Who Knocks
05-08-2018, 01:20 PM
I was always taught that it doesn't matter what job you are interviewing for, whether it be the CEO of a Fortune 500 company or to be a garbage man, you dress nice for the interview, period. You only have one chance to make a first impression and you might be the world's greatest potential employee, but if you look like a moron when you walk in the office, you won't get hired because there will be others that actually take a little bit of pride in their appearance when looking for a job.

RBP
05-08-2018, 01:25 PM
I was always taught that it doesn't matter what job you are interviewing for, whether it be the CEO of a Fortune 500 company or to be a garbage man, you dress nice for the interview, period. You only have one chance to make a first impression and you might be the world's greatest potential employee, but if you look like a moron when you walk in the office, you won't get hired because there will be others that actually take a little bit of pride in their appearance when looking for a job.

And a pain in the ass who will constantly complain about how work rules don't accommodate her life.

deebakes
05-09-2018, 02:15 AM
:-k

http://as.cornell.edu/letitia-chai

from the article it seems like letitia blew it out of proportion just a little bit, huh? :lol:

Godfather
05-09-2018, 03:09 AM
“The professor proceeded to tell me, in front of my whole class, that I was inviting the male gaze away from the content of my presentation and onto my body,” [...]“Then, an international student (man) said that I should have more respect for the audience and that it was a moral obligation to dress more conservatively,”

I'd bet good money it didn't go down like that at all, but it's fucked and startling that she took whatever was actually said so far to the other extreme. If a prof or boss told me I was underdressed I would be mortified and apologetic. ALWAYS lean toward being overdressed... you can take a tie off, but you can't fix being underdressed at an event.


Like everyone's already said, I'm excited for this girl to go into the workforce and pull this kind of stunt. To land my first job out of college I went around dropping resumes off in person wearing a suit - later learned that's the only reason I got an interview over more qualified candidates at the place that hired me. This is definitely one of those 'what is this world coming to' stories...