{"id":7562,"date":"2015-09-17T16:35:40","date_gmt":"2015-09-17T20:35:40","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/circulatingnow.nlm.nih.gov\/?p=7562"},"modified":"2024-10-21T11:14:59","modified_gmt":"2024-10-21T15:14:59","slug":"from-private-matter-to-public-health-crisis","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/circulatingnow.nlm.nih.gov\/2015\/09\/17\/from-private-matter-to-public-health-crisis\/","title":{"rendered":"From Private Matter to Public Health Crisis"},"content":{"rendered":"

Dr. Catherine Jacquet<\/a> spoke today at the National Library of Medicine on \u201cFrom Private Matter to Public Health Crisis: Nursing and the Intervention into Domestic Violence.\u201d Dr. Jacquet <\/em>is guest curator of NLM\u2019s newest exhibition, <\/em>Confronting Violence: Improving Women’s Lives<\/a>, and Assistant Professor of History and Women’s Gender Studies at Louisiana State University. <\/i><\/em>Circulating Now interviewed her about her work.<\/em><\/p>\n

Circulating Now:<\/strong> Tell us a little about yourself. Where are you from? What do you do? What is your typical workday like?<\/p>\n

\"Catherine<\/a>Catherine Jacquet:\u00a0<\/strong>I am originally from Connecticut\u2014that\u2019s where I spent the first 21 years of my life. Since then I\u2019ve lived in Boston, Chicago, and Minneapolis and now I\u2019m in Louisiana where I am an assistant professor of history and women\u2019s and gender studies at Louisiana State University (Baton Rouge). I feel so fortunate because I get to do what I love. My workdays vary but I typically do some combination of the following: prepping and teaching my courses, working on revisions to my book manuscript, responding to student emails and\/or meeting with students, grading student assignments, attending faculty meetings, working on committee projects, advising graduate students, reading and commenting on colleagues\u2019 work, developing new courses\u2026 It depends on the week and the time of year, but there is always plenty of work waiting for me!<\/p>\n

CN:\u00a0<\/strong>You\u2019ve just finished work on a new exhibition here at the National Library of Medicine, what sparked your interest in curating Confronting Violence: Improving Women\u2019s Lives<\/a><\/em>?<\/p>\n

CJ: <\/strong>For the past decade I\u2019ve been researching anti-rape activism in the United States. I\u2019m particularly interested in how the civil rights and women\u2019s liberation movements understood rape as an issue and how activists sought to make change. When I was approached with the proposal to work on this exhibit with the NLM, I was immediately interested since there is so much overlap between the battered women\u2019s movement and the feminist anti-rape movement of the 1970s. I wanted to learn more about the movement against domestic violence, and this exhibition gave me the perfect opportunity to do that. I was also excited to work on a public history project\u2014this was a very different way of producing history than the traditional academic writing that I\u2019m used to. With the exhibition, there is the potential to reach a much broader audience and that was very exciting to me.<\/p>\n