Skip to Main Content

Photo Albums

Dr. Jackson Katz, Mentors in Violence Prevention, 2/17/2017

a man in a suit pointing his fingers

Dr. Jackson Katz is an educator, filmmaker, and cultural theorist in the areas of masculinity and preventing gender violence. He delivered a talk, 'Taking It Personally: Why Gender Violence Is An Issue For Men,' Thursday night in Ball Theater.

a man standing in front of a microphone

Known for his pioneering academic work and activism, Dr. Katz is the co-founder of Mentors in Violence Prevention, an influential gender violence prevention program in North America.

a man standing in front of a screen

MVP is the first major program of its kind to work with college and professional athletes, as well as the U.S. military.

a man talking to another man

During and after his talk, there were plenty of questions from students in attendance.

a man standing next to another man

'How do you become a good person,' Katz asked. 'Through empathy, compassion, and intellectual curiosity.'

a man talking to a man

Friday morning Katz met with student leaders in Trippet Hall. Here Katz begins the Q&A session as Corey Leuters '19 looks on.

a group of men sitting at a table

Ryan Walters '18 listens intently.

a man in a black shirt

'Gender violence is a men's issue,' said Katz. 'Any solution must include the work of men.'

a man sitting in a chair

Sam Surgalski '19 shares a laugh during the talk.

a group of men sitting in chairs

Anthony Eley '19 pauses as someone at his table poses a question.

a man in a black shirt

'The major innovation of MVP is the Bystander Apprach. It's not perpetrator and victim. All members of a peer group can assist. We all have a role to play,' said Katz.

a man sitting in a chair

Drew Biddle '17 awaits an answer.

a man in a purple shirt

'Instead of focusing on risk reduction, the idea was to bring everybody in the peer culture into the discussion,' said Katz. 'It gave us a way to talk to men.'

a man in a purple shirt

'If you laugh along with the jokes and the comments, Katz asked, 'aren't you complicit in the actions?'

a woman holding a piece of paper

Assistant Professor of History Sabrina Thomas introduces Dr. Katz during his afternoon talk in Baxter Hall with faculty and staff, 'Gender Violence Prevention as an Educational Leadership Imperative.'

a man speaking into a microphone

'I see these fundamentally as leadership issues,' said Katz. 'Leaders set the tone. These are hard conversations...an expression of concern takes guts. I think men's lives improve when we have these conversations.'

a man in a suit speaking

'It takes guts to take these steps forward,' Katz said. 'I feel that a lot of men agree with steppting up. The goal is to faciliate dialogue.'

a man standing in front of a podium

'This is 100 percent relevant to a school like Wabash,' Katz said. 'This is totally consistent with this school's values. This is an incredibly important space for these dialogues.'

a man in a suit speaking at a podium

'What better place to stress the importance of these conversations than in an all-male institution,' asked Katz.

a man pointing at a chalkboard

The hour-long conversation was sponsored by the Gender Issues Committee.

a man standing in front of a podium

The questions from Katz were many: 'What can you do? How do you think through scenarios? How do we integrate these? The dialogue is part of the pedagogy,' he said.

a man in a suit pointing his finger

The slogan, 'Wabash Always Fights,' the first time I heard that I thought, 'for justice…Wabash Always Fights for Justice,' said Katz. 'Fighting is ok if you are fighting for justice. It’s not the idea of fighting, it’s what you are fighting for. I think it would make a very powerful statement as one of only three remaining men’s colleges in the United States if part of the mission of the college was to train young men for gender justice; to go out in the world and help to promote equality between the sexes and reduce gender violence. I think that would fit with the existing mission of the college, but it would be an expansion of that mission. It would be incredibly powerful and set an example that training young men of character includes speaking out against sexism.'

a woman in glasses pointing at something

Jennifer Abbott, Associate Profesor of Rhetoric, asks a question of Dr. Katz.

a man and woman sitting in a room

Visiting Assistant Professor of Philosophy Jeffrey Gower had a front-row seat for the conversation.


Download Album Photos

Back to Top