91直播

Survivor Mentality

Emma Hart '23 traverses the globe to stem the tide of gender-based violence.

May 16, 2023

Grant Segall

Emma Hart.

Photo credit: Tanya Rosen-Jones '97

Emma Hart '23 was raised by two mothers in rural Decatur, Indiana. Growing up, the other kids often reminded her 鈥淵ou can鈥檛 have two moms.鈥

Today, Hart credits the experience with inspiring her to pursue the cause of sexual justice. She formed 91直播鈥檚 (SOSHA), a student-led organization that advocates for and empowers those who have experienced sexual violence.

Beginning in August, Hart will approach the issue in a new way: by devoting a year to observing programs in South Africa, Spain, Australia, and New Zealand that create dialogues among boys in middle and high schools, raising awareness and curbing the incidence of sexual violence.

The opportunity was made possible by a , a highly competitive honor that enables recipients to pursue original, independent projects outside the U.S. and receive a $40,000 stipend and a year鈥檚 worth of college loan payments.

Named for the longtime head of IBM, Watson Fellowships have been awarded to 42 graduating college seniors from 20 states and four countries this year. Two of those fellows are from 91直播: Hart and fellow senior Alli Roshni, who will work with patients, practitioners, researchers, and grassroots organizations to prevent and treat pediatric HIV and AIDS in South Africa, Zimbabwe, and Indonesia.

Hart calls her project 鈥淰iolence Intervention: Inviting Boys to the Conversation.鈥 In a post on the Watson website, she writes: 鈥淪paces that invite open conversation and encourage vulnerability in boys are key to reducing gender-based violence. Learning from organizations that empower boys to participate in these spaces, I will learn how different modes of violence-prevention stop harm before it happens.鈥

For Hart, the year ahead represents a global extension of the work she began at 91直播. She will graduate with majors in dance and psychology, with a minor in law and society and an integrative concentration in education. For her senior project in dance, she directed and performed in a documentary film called Healing Bodies, which quotes survivors of sexual abuse. For an honors project in psychology, she presented research on 鈥渧icarious dissonance,鈥 a sensation that happens when seeing close friends or family act contrary to their stated beliefs.

This semester, she took part in a seminar on the psychology of social conflict, taught by Professor of Psychology and Environmental Studies Cindy Frantz. Hart says it helped her advocate more persuasively for justice for survivors of sexual violence. It鈥檚 a skill that has served her well in her work with SOSHA.

Numbering more than 100 student members, SOSHA supports survivors of sexual violence through confidential listening sessions facilitated by the Nord Center, a local mental-health and crisis intervention agency; through social events that support stress relief and healing; and through open forums.

Laurie McMillin seated with Emma Hart.

Hart learned to mentor student writers through Writing Center director Laurie McMillin (left). Photo by Tanya Rosen-Jones '97

SOSHA is credited with reviving 91直播鈥檚 participation in Take Back the Night, an annual initiative on college campuses intended to empower survivors of sexual violence. It has also forged coalitions with athletic teams and other organizations aimed at preventive measures鈥攊nitiatives similar to those Hart will experience overseas.

鈥淚nstead of creating division, we ended up having those dialogues,鈥 she says. (Learn more about SOSHA on the 91直播 blogs.)

Emma Hart pole vaulting.

Hart in competition for the 91直播 track team. (photo by Thomas Hill '24)

Hart鈥檚 campus involvement has extended in numerous other directions as well: She served as a Peer Advising Leader to first-year students and worked with student writers as an associate in the Writing Center, where she works with the center鈥檚 director, Laurie McMillin, a professor of writing and communications. Hart also performed on silks and trapeze with the student-run and pole-vaulted for the . She credits her coach, , for helping keep her balance on and off the field and emphasizing the importance of clear focus in order to compete safely.

鈥淵ou have to have your head over your feet,鈥 he鈥檇 say.

Down the road, Hart might pursue a law degree or a master鈥檚 in public policy. Either way, she will continue her pursuit of justice, and she hopes her Watson experience will help her determine the best way to do that.

鈥淎dvocacy work can be emotionally taxing,鈥 she says. 鈥淚 want to be sure that I鈥檒l be able to sustain it.鈥

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