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Perspectives
A NEWSLETTER OF THE ASA THEORY SECTION


Letter from the Chair - Summer 2022: Sociology from/of Latin America

8/29/2022

4 Comments

 

Claudio E. Benzecry
​(Northwestern University)

This is my second and last letter as the sectional chair. I would like to thank all the council members, newsletter editors, junior theorist symposium organizers, and award committee members, who have generously undertaken the work that leads to a successful conference and a year-long engagement with the section.[1] After three years we were able to see each other in person, mingle, debate, celebrate. The Theory section activities started with the Junior Theorist Symposium, followed by a great Coser Salon lecture by Greta Krippner on the history of individualized risk, 
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an international panel on field theory, and two sibling sessions on Global Theorizing (joint with the GATS section), and Theorizing the US. The intention of the latter -as sketched on my first letter from the chair- was to help us to better think of the US as a historical formation instead of the de facto unit for generalization, and the related limitation for the category Global South -as used in everyday US sociological conversation- to capture the heterogeneity of the non-Western world at large, and of Latin America in particular.[2]
We were not alone on this intellectual pursuit in Los Angeles, though, the final part of Professor Cecilia Menjivar’s Presidential Address was dedicated to the twin purpose of showing how much knowledge from the Global South can be generative, and how sociology and public and policy interventions have been historically central to Latin American social sciences. On the first point, Dr. Menjivar -born in El Salvador- referred to her intellectual influences, as well as explained how much knowledge produced in the Global South can help us to “better understand conditions in the U.S. today, not the least because the same forces that have ravaged the global south are also wreaking havoc here.” On the second, she described a long standing Latin American tradition of political intervention, seen tragically for instance in the closure of sociology departments and the proscription and killing of sociologists in the Southern Cone during the military dictatorships of the 70s and 80s. In highlighting how sociologists from the region have been involved in applying knowledge for social change she finds a lesson for debates in the US “between advancing science or engaging in the struggles stemming from sociological knowledge” noticing how these lines “have been blurred for decades in Latin American sociology. Indeed, the challenge there is not to choose one or the other, but rather, to find ways to better combine the two.”
 
To illustrate this last point, Dr. Menjivar chose a picture from the mobilization in Argentina in favor of the legalization of abortion, an experience that has become tidal all throughout Latin America, and made it to the conference itself, with numerous scholars wearing the pañuelos verdes that have been for almost a decade symbols of the fight for reproductive rights in the region. That image points to a felicitous coincidence with this missive and this newsletter, as the objective of this piece is to introduce a symposium of short but substantive contributions about sociology of/from Latin America, which includes the opinion piece “Feminism at a Crossroads: Key takeaways from Latin America.” As sketched on the previous letter, the intent is to present how certain key discussions on terms like social protest, state rights, and environmental justice, among others, are operationalized in Latin America to illuminate the historical specificities of countries in the peripheries as well as those taken-for-granted at the center.
 
To choose what would be the topics featured here, I used as reference the themes of the presidential panels from the 2021 and 2022 from the Latin American Studies Association (LASA), the largest association that deals with studies of the area, with members from all of the Americas.  The presidential themes included presentations on agricultural technology, food security and development; the relationship between Latin America, the US and the Caribbean; new feminisms; the new right-wing mobilization; mobility and migration policy, as well as debates about extractivism and its role within regional development strategies.
 
We tend to ask if the subaltern can speak, but get a bit puzzled when theories by peripheral scholars don’t conform to the established geographical division of labor, to the pairing of what happens in the region with the topics we have used to make sense of it from to the center to refer to it, or when they lack a more “radical” take on the phenomena. The spirit of this symposium is one of opening up a conversation. There is sometimes an impetus to extend themes and theories of the US into new contexts, without reading much local scholarship, or when done, using them as “input” in what is not an intellectual dialogue but rather viewed as stepping stones to build away from that. We hope this small showcase of themes, theories, and scholars is just the beginning of a much more thorough South-North engagement in the future.
 
The articles that follow are written by Latin American scholars working in Latin America and in the US to discuss what are the main issues in their agenda, and how they make sense of them. The list includes in three of the cases collaborations between scholars working in both contexts, and who have done research in -by alphabetical order- Argentina, Bolivia, Brasil, Chile, Colombia, Ecuador, Mexico, and Puerto Rico; as well as in the US.[3] As the reader will notice there are plenty of references to scholarship produced in Latin America (there’s far more bibliography on Portuguese and Spanish than in your regular sociological contribution in the US), as well as to scholarship about Latin American in the US. The spirit of this intervention is not one of saving an uncontaminated standpoint, but rather of showing the actual frictions, disjunctures, aporias, displacements that happen when putting knowledge in motion.  
 
In the first article, “Feminism at a Crossroads: Key takeaways from Latin America,” authors from Mexico, Argentina and the US, discuss three insights that can be learned from the reproductive justice movements and beyond in terms of social-justice-oriented versions of democracy; the metaphor of wave or tide to understand the temporality of the organization of the movement and its consolidation; and the horizontal/network like character of successful and effective participation. In the second article, “Plurinationality as an idea and a reality in 21st Century Bolivia, Ecuador, and Chile,” Jorge Derpic discusses the centrality in ethnic identification and mobilization for citizenship rights, showing how plurinationality is a challenge to the processes of mestizaje, central to the modernizing and cultural  constitution of the national state as we have come to think of it; the article also provides us with a nice entry to the debates on the neo-extractivist character of the development these plurinational states build themselves upon economically, and the ensuing contradictions at play. In the third article, “Cannibalizing the Northern Environmental Justice Perspective,” the authors weave through their own work on environmental justice and toxic uncertainty, to show the myopias that result in the non-reflexive import of US based theories to make sense of a case with different gender, political and ethnic dynamics. In the fourth article, “Debt, Greed, and Disasters: For a Plausible Study of Puerto Rico and its Systemic Risk,” Salvador Vidal-Ortiz places Puerto Rico in a unique in-between-space betwixt Latin America and the US, constituted by Caribbean coloniality, and as a fruitful locus to think about the intertwined character of debt, disaster and “modernization.” The contribution is also a call for peripheral and horizontal networks in the generation of knowledge production. The last article for this symposium, written by two different generations of scholars (Cook-Martín and Jensen) specialized in migration and mobility regimes in the Americas, is a powerful theoretical and methodological reflection about the myopias present in the US versions of how migration and access to status and rights happen, as well as in the irreflexive use of “Global South” as an antidote. This last contribution proposes some tools for epistemological vigilance to avoid said myopias.
  
The papers point to several potential avenues for US sociology to learn from what happens south of the border, the contributions by are both invitation to think together, to see how things are conceptualized differently, and at the most basic level, to know about current social and political developments in the region. At a theoretical level, the articles call our attention to the historically intertwined character of sociological scholarship, and public and policy interventions; explores the political arrangements resulting from racial and ethnic configurations other than the binary theorized and consequently exported from the US experience; proposes to upend the intellectual division of labor between North and South by showing how knowledge diffusion works at the local level on a hybrid and “cannibalized” way, instead of the direct export of frames from Western Europe and the US to understudied regions of the world; the production of lay expertise and activist networks on a continental level, emphasizing the movement from South to North (as in the example of the Marea Verde, ASA President Menjivar mentioned on her address); more generally, the articles serve to also destabilize our understanding of North and South, and of constructs such as the US and Latin America as fixed intellectual categories.
 
Lastly, the symposium has been a work of actual collaboration among scholars, including some involved in the political movements they analyze. Unlike other manifesto-like documents, reflecting on intellectual agendas or the movement of ideas and the power dynamics of it -like my first letter from the chair-, this symposium is the result of exchanges across the Americas, by scholars who have put their bodies and mind to collaborate in concrete ways, building off their own research and that of their colleagues, and writing across borders. The Theory section has answered the call from the presidential address to do South-North cross pollination. We can only hope this will be just one among many similar endeavors.    



[1] I would like to specially thanks Simone Polillo, the past chair, for his guidance; Claire Decoteau -the treasurer-, for all her hard work behind the scene to make sure the section was running smoothly through the pandemic; and Luis Flores, who went beyond his duties as student council member to make sure the JTS conference and awards were thoroughly advertised.
[2] A more thorough account of the section activities will happen on the Fall issue of this newsletter.
[3] The list is of course incomplete, there are other ways or classifying/ arranging scholarship from/of Latin America. We also suffered some last-minute desertions because of the pandemic (an article on State, development and expertise written by Brazilian academics, for instance); scholars refusing the invitation because of other commitments, etc. One of the unfortunate realities of attempts to generate disciplinary change is that people interested in it are already participating in multiple spaces and initiatives oriented towards the same, and have a higher demand of their time in comparison to those interested in maintaining status quo. There is also a related infrastructural inertial impediment to this kind of writing, which counts very little for our CVS.​


4 Comments

Migration Myopias and Insights from the Global South

8/29/2022

6 Comments

 

Katherine Jensen
​& David Cook-Martín

Sociological theory purports to be universal but is prone to the same biases and myopias as any other field of the social sciences. In his December newsletter commentary, Claudio Benzecry questioned persistent assumptions of U.S. exceptionalism and the associated conceptualization of non-U.S. cases. He raises the prospect that, in reference to cases outside the North Atlantic West, "Global South" may flatten differences when devoid of the critical and relational character from which the term emerged. This is part of a broader warning that globalizing theory, for all its promise, may reproduce U.S.-centric binaries. After all, many of us (writers and audience alike) are positioned in North American institutions which weigh heavily in the global system of knowledge production. Whatever our rhetorical commitments to de-centering that experience, we are, as Adrian Favell has noted with respect to migration theory, "almost always critics writing from the heart of the Death Star" (2022, 7).
​

In this brief essay, we suggest that even from the heart of empire one can make judicious use of "Global South'' through sustained comparative and historical approximations to matters of sociological interest and in dialogue with knowledge producers outside core contexts.[1] We distinguish revelatory or reflexive uses of Global South from obfuscating or irreflexive ones - those that confound understanding by hiding or leveling out meaningful differences. Our argument is informed by an analysis of refuge and migration in the Americas, but with comparative references to Europe, the Middle East, and Australasia. Drawing on research in and across these regions, we probe how an irreflexive Global South perspective misses significant differences, obfuscates similarities, or cannot readily explain aspects of migration policies, movements, and lived experiences.

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6 Comments

Cannibalizing the Northern Environmental Justice Perspective

8/29/2022

4 Comments

 

Pablo Lapegna
(University of Georgia, USA)


Johana Kunin
(Universidad Nacional de San Martín-UNSAM & National Scientific and Technical Research Council-CONICET, Argentina)

Contra todos os importadores de consciência enlatada. (…) Contra o mundo reversível e as idéias objetivadas. Cadaverizadas. O stop do pensamento que é dinâmico. (…) Só não há determinismo — onde há mistério. Mas que temos nós com isso? (…) Mas não foram cruzados que vieram. Foram fugitivos de uma civilização que estamos comendo, porque somos fortes e vingativos como o Jabuti (…) A transfiguração do Tabu em totem. Antropofagia.
 
Against all importers of canned consciousness (...) Against the reversible world and objectified ideas. Cadaverized. The stop of thought that is dynamic (...) There is only no determinism — where there is mystery. But what do we have with that? (...) But it wasn’t crusaders who came. They were fugitives from a civilization that we are eating, because we are strong and vengeful like the Jabuti (...) The transfiguration of the Taboo into a totem. Anthropophagy.
           
--Oswald de Andrade, Manifesto Antropófago (Anthropophagic Manifesto)
What analytical operations are necessary to use environmental justice (EJ) perspectives in Latin America? Broadly understood, EJ may be a form of activism, a set of guidelines for public policy, or a research perspective. These three “branches” are usually intertwined but can be analytically distinguished. Yet they share an interest in addressing the uneven distribution of environmental harms and hazards along racial, ethnic, class, and/or gender inequalities. Our main critique here is towards a perspective that blends EJ as research and as a form of alleged activism through academic writing. In which particular ways do racial formations intersect with social class dynamics and gender inequalities in Latin America, demanding a revamping of the EJ perspective when used in that regional context? And how can we move beyond dichotomous understandings that condemn “polluting actors” or celebrate “resisting communities” and instead advance a more nuanced interpretation of the unequal distribution of environmental goods and harms? We address these questions taking a stance inspired by Brazilian writer Oswald de Andrade and the anthropophagous movement, sidestepping the trap of being “importers of canned consciousness.”


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4 Comments

Plurinationality as an idea and a reality in 21st Century Bolivia, Ecuador, and Chile

8/29/2022

2 Comments

 

Jorge Derpic
Assistant Professor, Sociology & Latin American and Caribbean Studies
(University of Georgia )

Chile is in the process of harmonizing the first draft of a potential new constitution with national and international legal frameworks. If further approved through a national referendum, the new constitution could turn Chile into the third Latin American state to embrace the concept of plurinationality as one of its core principles. Ecuador in 2008, and Bolivia in 2009, incorporated the concept into their most recent constitutions. While Bolivia officially changed its name from Republic to Unitary Social State of Plurinational and Communitarian Law, both countries went beyond officially recognizing indigenous and Afro-American peoples and nations within their national territories. They also established different degrees for the autonomous governance of indigenous peoples while respecting their self-determination. The Chilean constitution promises to follow the same path.

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2 Comments

Feminism at a Crossroads: Key takeaways from Latin America

8/29/2022

2 Comments

 

Elisabeth Jay Friedman
​(
University of San Francisco)

​
Constanza Tabbush
​(
University of Buenos Aires-CONICET and UN Women)

​
Gisela Zaremberg,
(
Latin American Faculty of Social Sciences [FLACSO] Campus Mexico)

On a range of gender justice issues, particularly abortion rights, the United States has been positioned as an example for ‘lagging’ Catholic Latin American countries to emulate. Recently, the tables appear to have turned, challenging linear understandings of progress and shifting notions of who is trailing whom. Despite fierce opposition, most Catholic Latin American countries continue on a liberalizing path to expanding sexual and reproductive rights. After the pioneer case of Uruguay, which enshrined the right to abortion in law in 2012, others have followed suit: Chile expanded sexual and reproductive rights in 2017; Colombia and Mexico decriminalized abortion in 2022; and the Argentine Congress legalized abortion rights in 2020. Moving in exactly the opposite direction, the U.S. Supreme Court’s decision to strike down Roe vs. Wade has rolled back 50 years of women’s constitutional right to abortion. The U.S. has now joined ranks with Nicaragua and Honduras, the only other countries in the Americas that have moved towards restricting abortion in these past years. The Court’s decision is probably the most significant regression in women’s rights seen on the American continent, because it will put countless lives at risk. It also threatens access to contraception and regression with respect to both marriage equality and gender-affirming medical care, and is likely to bolster anti-abortion and radical conservative groups globally.

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Debt, Greed, and Disasters: For a Plausible Study of Puerto Rico and its Systemic Risk

8/29/2022

2 Comments

 

Salvador Vidal-Ortiz
(American University)

The task of thinking through coloniality and Puerto Rico (in its relation to Latin America and to USAmerican sociology) for the Theory Section’s newsletter is an overwhelming one. What makes it so is that there are a multitude of ways in which Puerto Rico is and it is not part of both Latin America and the United States; yet, given the forces of empire in thinking and theorizing social and sociological projects, this task requires our attention. The reminiscence of Caribbean traces onto Puerto Rico and back at the rest of the Caribbean make a loop, resulting in the unit of analysis to be not a fixed entity, and somewhat slippery: Puerto Rico is, and isn’t, a country, although it has remained a nation in spite of this history. The Island (or archipelago, as some have begun to refer to it) continues to struggle and strive in motions and movements that have impacted it to its core. The notion of movements here takes literal meaning – so called natural disasters such as hurricanes and earthquakes heightened by global climate change crisis and the extraction of natural resources in and around the Island; as it has with the flow of hundreds of thousands of Puerto Ricans from the Island, to the U.S., and the rest of the world. Among these unnatural disasters shaking the Island is an external debt of 72 billion dollars. A sign of its colonial status, Puerto Rico was not seen as an independent nation like others that seek refinancing and restructuring from organisms such as the International Monetary Fund, while at the same time, it could not receive U.S. support given that Puerto Rico is not a U.S. state, but a territory. Moreover, there was a U.S. (Federal) fiscal board (under a bill whose acronym is PROMESA or “promise” – an irony still pressing on the open wound) that managed to, until very recently, restructure portions of the Island’s budget, with surveillance for years to come.[1]

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The State of the Canon: Sociological Theory Syllabi in the United States

8/29/2022

1 Comment

 

Charles Kurzman
(University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill)
December 28, 2021

When I was in graduate school in the 1980s, the syllabus for my required course in sociological theory started with Karl Marx and ended with Max Weber. In between, we read Emile Durkheim. That was it.
 
Even then, this limited canon was considered anomalous. The syllabus I was handed as a teaching assistant included social interactionism, post-structuralism, and feminism. The first undergraduate theory course I taught on my own added ethnomethodology, postmodernism, and the study of racialized inequality, working mainly from the anthology assembled by Charles Lemert, who aimed to place “multicultural” theories on par with the “white, male advocates of European culture who wrote the first, best-known social theories.” (The fifth edition of Lemert’s anthology, published in 2013, expanded its title to include “global” theories as well.)

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Emerging theorist spotlight: abigail cary moore

8/29/2022

1 Comment

 

abigail cary moore
​(University of Virginia)

My dissertation, Binding a Future of Violence: Acts, Signs, and Interpretations in the Racial State, was born out of wondering what it would mean to think of the state not as having a monopoly on legitimate violence, but as having a monopoly on the processes of legitimation for violence. 

While these phrases may amount to very similar things in practice, ​approaching the relationship between the state and various
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forms of violence from the perspective of legitimation shifts the analytical emphasis to processes of interpretation, and the legal validation and perpetuation of certain interpretations over others. 

I analyze the oral arguments of myriad court cases involving disputes about the definition and legality of certain kinds of violence, including U.S. Supreme Court cases declaring the KKK’s ritual of burning crosses an act of protected speech rather than a threat of violence (Virginia v. Black 2003), and the boundaries of legal police use of force (Tennessee v. Garner 1984; Graham v. Connor 1989; Scott v. Harris 2007), as well as cases in the lower courts, such as the 2021 trial of Kyle Rittenhouse, at which the teen was acquitted for the shootings that resulted in the deaths of two men and injury of a third in Kenosha, WI. Through the textual analysis of these cases, it became clear that much of the interpretation taking place in the courtroom was deeply temporal, rooted in varying ways of situating a single sign in time.  Thus, I argue that temporality is a crucial and undertheorized dimension of interpretation.  


Moreover, my work examines acts of interpretation, with temporality at their cores, as acts of performative power.  While performative power has primarily been theorized as arising in moments of dramatic change, if we return to the semiotic roots of the concept, particularly in the works of Judith Butler (through Derrida and JL Austin), we can use generative iteration of performative power as a way to describe and explain variably durable discourses and patterns of action.  While the Supreme Court is perhaps a paradigmatic site of this phenomenon in action, I posit iteration as a useful way to interrogate the relationship between interpretation, performative power, and durability in any number of social structures.  
​


Abigail Cary Moore is a cultural sociologist with interests in social theory, semiotics, race, and law and society.  She holds a B.A. from Yale University in English and Women’s, Gender, and Sexuality Studies, and an M.A. from the University of Virginia in Sociology.  She will receive her Ph.D. from UVA in May 2023.  Most recent publications include “Signs and Their Temporality: The Performative Power of Interpretation in the Supreme Court” (2022) in Sociological Theory; and “Policing Potential Violence” (2022) in New Political Science. 

1 Comment

Emerging theorist spotlight: Birgan Gokmenoglu

8/29/2022

1 Comment

 

birgan Gokmenoglu
(BirmingHam city university)

I study the relationship between time and power in contentious politics, with a focus on Turkey and more recently the UK. I am interested in understanding time as an instrument of power and resistance, and in conceptualizing some of the specifically temporal dynamics of socio-political life, with a view to developing a political sociology of time.
​

These temporal dynamics may range from electoral cycles to disruptions to the electoral schedule, from synchronization to temporal dissonance, from future projections to collective memory, from political imagination to constructions of utopia and dystopia, from
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short notices to waiting times, from the unequal distribution of time across social groups to anticipation, dread, hope, the possible and the potential.

As a qualitative researcher, I analyze the temporal dynamics of socio-political life through experiences of time, narratives of time, and practices of timing. Temporal experiences, narratives, and practices not only shape and are shaped by political horizons, discourses, and imaginations, but are also embedded in everyday material life. In my previous research on the participatory-democratic local assemblies in Istanbul, the interconnectedness of the temporal and the material manifested in activists’ tactics and the organizational structures that they built. In the same study, I also found that resistance against an authoritarian regime accentuated a “politics of anticipation” where the future itself became the terrain of contention. The politics of anticipation involved both the futurity that is inherent in politics, and also the necessity on the part of the activists to constantly reorient themselves and each other towards anticipated futures. 
​

My current theoretical project aims to conceptualize “political time” and the “political calendar,” taking inspiration from Barbara Adam’s timescape perspective and Bourdieu’s concept of the political field; incorporating insights from cultural sociology and the theory of interaction, especially the work of Nina Eliasoph and Iddo Tavory. With this project, I seek to contribute a conceptual tool to talk about time in politics, to bridge different studies and disciplines.

My work thus far has focused on the temporal interactions between activists and the regime in Turkey. Moving forward, my next research project will be on how the above mentioned temporal dynamics play a role in creating and maintaining specifically raced, classed, and gendered inequalities in the climate justice movement in the UK. Barbara Adam is again an inspiration, along with Sarah Sharma, Sara Pursley, Lisa Baraitser, Judy Wajcman, Laura Bear, among other critical thinkers.

This body of work seeks ultimately to contribute to developing the political sociology of time, sociology of time and the future, and critical time studies, as well as political sociology and sociological theory more broadly.

Dr. Birgan Gokmenoglu is a political ethnographer whose research interests are in social and political theory, social movements and contentious politics, time and temporality, alternatives to liberal democracy, and struggles for social justice. She holds a PhD in Political Sociology from the London School of Economics and an MA in Sociology from the University of Southern California. She is currently Lecturer (Assistant Professor) in Sociology at Birmingham City University (UK).


1 Comment

ASA Theory section awards 2022

8/29/2022

2 Comments

 

Theory section awards

Lewis Coser Award for Theoretical Agenda Setting:
Claire Decoteau, University of Illinois, Chicago

Theory Prize (Book) 
Co-winners:
Charles Camic, Veblen: The Making of an Economist Who Unmade Economics
Paige L. Sweet, The Politics of Surviving: How Women Navigate Domestic Violence and Its Aftermath
 
Honorable Mention:
Monika Krause, Model Cases: On Canonical Research Objects and Sites 

Junior Theorist Award
Winner:
Hirschman, Daniel. 2021. "Rediscovering the 1%: Knowledge Infrastructures and the Stylized Facts of Inequality." American Journal of Sociology 127(3): 739-786.
 
Honorable Mention:
Scoville, Caleb. 2022. Tufts University. “Constructing Environmental Compliance: Law, Science, and Endangered Species Conservation in California’s Delta.” American Journal of Sociology 127 (4). 

Best Student Paper Award
Winner:
Gordon Brett (Toronto) "Dueling with Dual Process Models. Cognition, Creativity and Context." Sociological Theory 40 (2): 179-201
 
Honorable Mention: 
Mary Shi (Berkeley) "”Until Indian title shall be… fairly extinguished:” The Public Lands, Settler Colonialism, and Early Government Promotion of Infrastructure in the United States."

​
2 Comments

Summer 2022 - Recent Publications

8/29/2022

0 Comments

 

Recent Publications

Charrad, Mounira M., Amina Zarrugh and Hyun Jeong Ha. 2021. “The Arab Spring Protests.”  Contexts: Sociology for the Public, 20 (1): 58-61.    
 
Charrad, Mounira M. Amina Zarrugh & Hyun Jeong Ha. 2021. “The Reclamation Master Frame: A Visual Study of the Arab Uprisings.”. 2021. Research in Social Movements, Conflicts & Change. Vol 44: 11-35.  https://doi.org/10.1108/S0163-786X20210000044004.

Moore, Abigail Cary. 2022. "Signs and Their Temporality: The Performative Power of Interpretation in the Supreme Court," Sociological Theory  https://doi.org/10.1177/07352751221110240.

Staubmann, Helmut. 2022. Sociology in a New Key: Essays in Social Theory and Aesthetics. Cham, Switzerland: Springer Nature Switzerland AG. 
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    FALL 2022 Content

    Letter from the Chair: "Theory as Translation"

    "An Interview with Jordanna Matlon, author of A Man Among Other Men"

    Book Symposium on A Man Among Other Men by Jordanna Matlon
    • Jessie Luna
    • Annie Hikido
    • Yannick Coenders
    • Anna Skarpelis

    Colonialism, Modernity and the Canon: An Interview with Gurminder K. Bhambra

    ​Emerging Social Theorists Spotlight
    • Heidi Nicholls
    • Miray Philips
    • Feyza Akova
    • Davon Norris

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