This fall, with support from the Centers’ Ellen Krosney Shockro
International Hospitality Fund, WCW became temporary home to two
distinguished Asian scholars.
Professor Tao Jie of the
English department of Peking University in Beijing has a particular
interest in the work of the Centers after serving
as the founding deputy director of the Center for Research on Women at
her university in China. A skilled translator and interpreter for
English-speaking writers and authors, Professor Tao Jie has been an
essential liaison between women’s studies programs in the West and
those in Asia. She has co-hosted numerous international conferences and
produced and edited many writings, including a book on women in China,
which will be published in 2003 by the Feminist Press of New York. The
Chinese Writers’ Union awarded her a prestigious prize for her
translation of William Faulkner’s novel Sanctuary. While at WCW, she
presented a luncheon seminar entitled “A Chinese Scholar, Translator,
and Interpreter Looks at Research on Women in China and Discusses Her
Work on Women in the Fiction of William Faulkner.”
Raquel
David-Ching of Manila has a long history with the National S.E.E.D.
Project on Inclusive Curriculum, co-directed by Peggy McIntosh and
Emily Style. Following S.E.E.D. training in the summer of 1991, Raquel
returned to the International School of Manila where she led S.E.E.D.
seminars for her colleagues. Having been encouraged to create S.E.E.D.
seminars to fit the context of her own school and culture, she found
that the lenses of gender, race, class, and nation gave her a new
awareness of injustice in the school salary structure, whereby Filipino
teachers and staff were paid far less than their American counterparts.
After a six-year struggle to amend this situation, Raquel and the
teachers’ union, of which she was president, took their case to court.
In 2000, the Supreme Court of the Philippines ruled in favor of pay
equity. Another international school in the Philippines immediately
complied with the ruling, and now various other international
institutions are looking at their policies. David-Ching is a staff
member of National S.E.E.D., and comes to the U.S. twice a year to
attend the winter planning meeting and the summer New S.E.E.D. Leaders
Week. While at the Centers she is writing about diversity programs in
the U.S., including Anytown, S.E.E.D., and the Institute for
Cross-Cultural Communication in Portland, Oregon.
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