I'm so old, I remember when Loyola was at least a slight notch above mediocre

(White) Loyola professor tells us that an orderly spice rack is a sign of racism.

Cleanliness has historically been used as a cultural gatekeeping mechanism to reinforce status distinctions based on a vague understanding of “niceness”: nice people, with nice yards, in nice houses, make for nice neighborhoods.

What lies beneath the surface of this anti-messiness, pro-niceness stance is a history of classist, racist and sexist social structures.

Magazines like Good Housekeeping were once the brokers of idealized domestic work. Now online pantry porn sets the aspirational standard for becoming an ideal mom, ideal wife and ideal woman. This grew out of a shift toward an intensive mothering ideology that equates being a good mom with time-intensive, labor-intensive, financially expensive care work.

Proving that you can get anything published if the topic is either racism or sexism or, as here, both. And not only published: This woman actually receives a salary from the Jesuits.

COURSES TAUGHT

  • Fundamentals of Marketing (Undergraduate)

  • Integrated Marketing Communications (Undergraduate and Graduate)

  • Social Media Marketing and Brand Storytelling (Graduate)

  • Consumer Behavior (Undergraduate and Graduate)

AWARDS

  • Faculty Fellow, Gannon Center for Women and Leadership, Loyola University Chicago (2020)

  • Outstanding Reviewer of the Year, Young Consumers (2019)

  • Langerbeck Award for Undergraduate Research Mentoring, Loyola University Chicago (2019)

  • Distinguished Alum, Department of Mass Communication, Winthrop University (2018)

  • Outstanding Teacher of the Year - Undergraduate Programs Quinlan School of Business, Loyola University Chicago (2018)

  • Visiting Research Scholar, RMIT University (2017)

  • Reviewer of the Year, Marketing Education Review (2016)

  • Faculty Fellow, Advertising Educational Foundation’s (AEF) Visiting Professor Program (2015)

Of course, we mustn’t be too harsh on Miss Trenton, because everyone’s in on this scam

Teen gets into Stanford after writing ‘#BlackLivesMatter’ 100 times on app

His ancestors captured africans, and sold them to african kings