The Argosy, October 3, 2013

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Mount Allison’s

THE October 3, 2013

ARGOSY Independent Student Newspaper

Looking forward to next year’s Winter Carnival referendum since 1872

Vol. 143 Iss. 6

Women’s literature

U of T professor refuses to teach women writers Daniel Marcotte

Arts & Literature Writer

From left: Co-op co-ordinator Graham Muise, MASU VP External Affairs Ian Smith, and former MASU VP Michael Watkins pose with co-op bicycle. (Nick Sleptov/Argosy)

MASU Bike Co-op officially launches

After two years of planning and work, the Mount Allison Students’ Union Bike Co-op has officially launched. The launch was a brief event on September 27, led by Vice-President, External Affairs Ian Smith, and attended by the

MASU Executive, several councillors, and a few students. While the Friday event marked the official opening, bikes have been available for rent since the beginning of this academic year. At the site of the co-op shed behind the Athletic Centre, Smith thanked the various sponsors of the program, when he said that “the only part Mount Allison students have paid for was the shed.” On top of the donations from various businesses, “the rest of the bikes inside were provided by the RCMP.” The support from businesses included a donation from EOS Eco

Energy, a grant from Renaissance Sackville “covering the entire cost of the bikes”; a gift card donation from Mountain Equipment Co-op, which went towards accessories; and Consolvo Bikes in Moncton for what Smith called “incredible price on the bikes.” The five new bikes, bought from Consolvo, are of a high quality, and Bike Co-op Coordinator Graham Muise described them as, “so smooth.” Smith pointed to Michael Watkins, the MASU Vice-President, Campus Life two years ago, as the initial driving force behind getting the co-op funding through referendum. “I’m really excited for everything in

News

Science

Arts & Literature Sports

Cycles now available for public use Kevin Levangie

Political Beat Writer

MASU to host landlord fair:

Pg. 4

New organelle found in plants discovered: Pg. 8

Sackville Early Music Festival a success: Pg. 12

this project coming together,” Watkins said. He continued that two years ago, the RCMP provided the initial idea for the project: “They came to us one day, saying ‘We have all these bikes lying around that have come to us through various ways, […] do you want them?’” Upon hearing the announcement about the official launch, students flocked to book the bikes for the evening of September 26. Immediately following the launch, all of the functional bikes were in use. The service is open to all students, university staff, and residents of Sackville.

Soccer women still trying for a win: Pg. 17

I will admit that I occasionally enjoy literature by serious, white, middleaged, heterosexual males. Hemingway, Joyce, Fitzgerald, Tolstoy, Faulkner— all of these authors have published works that I personally love, and were I a professor, I would certainly consider putting these on a syllabus. A syllabus, I might add, that would also include works by Maya Angelou, Emily Dickinson, Mary Shelley, Alice Walker, Leslie Feinberg, and Sappho, to name a few. Not only because I believe that these writers are just as talented (and in many cases more so) as the others listed above, but also because I know that the messages contained in literature by women, queer and genderqueer writers, and people of colour are extremely valuable and crucial to our understanding of human society and the worlds that we inhabit and construct. Which is why I think it’s reasonable to be concerned when professors like David Gilmour of the University of Toronto state that they are simply “not interested in teaching books by women”, as he told Hazlitt last week, claiming he only teaches authors that he truly loves, none of which “happen to be Chinese, or women”. If that weren’t enough, he defended himself to the National Post by saying “there isn’t a racist or sexist bone in my body”. If this is true, then why does his list of the world’s “greatest authors” directly correlate with his own demographic, with middle-aged white men all making the grade? A common defence of Gilmour’s philosophy is that professors need to stick to an area of specialization in order to be successful educators, and that male authors are simply his chosen field. However, if a student of English literatures made this same claim and refused to take any courses except those

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