Constance Bumgarner Gee is an American scholar, memoirist, animal rights activist, and advocate of the medical use of cannabis. She was the founder and director of the Arts Policy and Administration Program at Ohio State University, and later an assistant professor at Brown University and tenured associate professor at Vanderbilt University. She is the author of Higher Education: Marijuana at the Mansion, a 2012 memoir about her life as "first lady" of several American research universities,[1] in which she writes of the no-holds barred corporate maneuverings of university leadership and hypocrisy of those who present themselves and their universities as society's moral beacons.[2][neutrality is disputed]
Bumgarner Gee was the executive editor of the Arts Education Policy Review, a peer-reviewed academic journal, from 1997 to 2010.[3][4] She also published chapters in scholarly volumes about arts education policy. According to academic Judith Smith Koroscik, one of her scholarly contributions is to not lament "why the public fails to understand and care about the arts, but, as arts educators, to begin with asking and building on what the public does understand and find meaningful about the arts."[6]
Bumgarner Gee published a memoir titled Higher Education: Marijuana at the Mansion in 2012.[5][7] In it, she recounts her times as the wife of university president Gordon Gee throughout their years at Ohio State, Brown and Vanderbilt universities.[7] She alleges members of Vanderbilt's politically conservative Board of Trust may have retaliated against her by exposing her medical marijuana use to Wall Street Journal reporters to hide their own conflicts of interest and because of her liberal political stances.[2]
Civic activities
Bumgarner Gee served on the boards of the Columbus (OH) Humane Society, Trinity Repertory Company (Providence, RI), the Rhode Island State Arts Council and, in Nashville, on the boards of the Frist Center for the Visual Arts and Actors Bridge Ensemble.[4] She served on the Board of Advisors of the Curb Center for Art, Enterprise, and Public Policy at Vanderbilt University.[4] She also served on the board of Through the Flower, founded by artist Judy Chicago.
Bumgarner Gee married Gordon Gee in 1994.[3] In 2006, an article published in The Wall Street Journal revealed that she had smoked cannabis inside Braeburn,[11] the chancellor's residence located at 211 Deer Park in Belle Meade owned by Vanderbilt University, to alleviate the intense nausea and other debilitating symptoms of Ménière's disease.[7][12] As a result of pressures of public life and political fallout from the Journal article, the couple divorced in 2008.[13] She now resides in Westport, Massachusetts where she is engaged in environmental and animal rights activism.[5]
In 2004, Bumgarner Gee was criticized for lowering the flag to half-mast at Braeburn after George W. Bush was re-elected as president of the United States.[14]
Selected scholarship
Robin Anne Atwood, Robert W. Backoff, Constance Bumgarner Gee. Identifying Characteristics in Excellent Public and Private Nonprofit Arts Organizations: A Comparative Analysis of Three High Performers. Columbus, Ohio: Ohio State University, 1995. 186 pages.[15]
Bryan Wayne Knicely, Constance Bumgarner Gee. A Strategic Management Assessment of The Palace Theatre and The Palace Cultural Arts Association Marion, Ohio. Columbus, Ohio: Ohio State University, 1996. 206 pages.[16]
Susan Pauline Genther, Constance Bumgarner Gee. An Investigation of The Impact of The Greater Columbus Arts Council's Artists-In-Schools Program on The Comprehensive Visual Arts Curriculum of Columbus Public Elementary Schools. Columbus, Ohio: Ohio State University, 1996. 364 pages.[17]
^ abBumgarner Gee, Constance (2012). Higher Education: Marijuana at the Mansion. Indianapolis, Indiana: Dog Ear Publishing. p. 300. ISBN9781457513657. OCLC816513614. What was not clear, he continued, was whether the Journal reporters had originally contacted one of the informants with questions about Vanderbilt's compliance with Sarbanes-Oxley, or if Cal Turner (or someone close to him) had called the Journal. [...] Gordon reminded me of his role as the chair of the shareholders committee during the Securities and Exchange Commission's investigation of Dollar General, and of his having been sent to inform Cal Turner that he had to step down as CEO of the company his family ran. He also reminded me of his stance with the segment of the board that had demanded that Denny Bottorff, because of his alleged marital infidelities, not be allowed to succeed Martha Ingram as chairman, and how he had encouraged Martha to stay on for another term. Gordon noted that Monroe Carell, the trustee who had alerted him to the situation with Denny, and whom the Journal described as "a key Gee supporter on the executive committee," had also taken a hit. (The Journal reporters had been informed of "a fuss" in 2002 over a long-held, noncompetitive contract by Central Parking Corporation to manage Vanderbilt's parking facilities. Monroe was the founder and chair of Central Parking.)