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Ph.D. Program in Sociology
CUNY Graduate Center
365 Fifth Avenue, Room 6112.04
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phone: (212) 817-8770
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email:sociology@gc.cuny.edu

Faculty Publications  

Student Publications | Alumni Publications

 

Prof. Min’s new book, "Ethnic Solidarity for Economic Survival: Korean Greengrocers in New York City," published by Russell Sage Foundation in April 2008 is in stores now. Min had a 30-minute interview about this book in March at CUNY TV's "City Talks." Congratulations to Prof. Min!


 

D. Brotherton and L. Kontos (editors), 2007.
“The Encyclopedia of Gangs,” New Haven, Connecticut: Greenwood Press

 


 

D. Brotherton and M. Flynn (editors), 2008.
“Globalizing the Streets: Cross-Cultural Perspectives on Youth, Social Control and Empowerment,” New York: Columbia University Press

 


 

D. Brotherton and P. Kratsemenas (Editors), 2008. “Keeping Out the Other: A Critical Analysis of Immigration Control Today,” New York: Columbia University Press.

 


 

Barbara Katz Rothman, Elizabeth Armstrong and Rebecca Tiger (phd candidate, CUNY, GC), BIOETHICAL ISSUES, SOCIOLOGICAL PERSPECTIVES, the latest volume in the Advances in Medical Sociology series from Elsevier. ( Barbara is the new series editor.)

 


 

Stephen Steinberg's Race Relations: A Critique was published by Stanford University Press in September. The book was featured in the Research & Books column in the Chronicle of Higher Education (November 16, 2007).



Wendy Simonds, Barbara Katz Rothman, Bari Meltzer Norman
Laboring On: Birth in Transition in the United States

This new publication is based on what was Barbara Katz Rothman's dissertation work, published 25 years ago, as In Labor. The new first author on this revision is Wendy Simonds, who was Barbara Katz Rothman's doctoral student, and is also a CUNY alum


For more information on the book, or to order your copy, visit one of these websites:
Amazon or Barnes&noble



Stanley Aronowitz
Just Around the Corner:  The Paradox of the Jobless Recovery

Americans have always believed that economic growth leads to job growth. In this groundbreaking analysis, Stanley Aronowitz argues that this is no longer true. Just Around the Corner examines the state of the American economy as planned by Democrats and Republicans over the last thirty years. Aronowitz finds that economic growth has become "delinked" from job creation, and that unemployment and underemployment are a permanent condition of our economy. He traces the historical roots of this state of affairs and sees under the surface of booms and busts a continuum of economic austerity that creates financial windfalls for the rich at the expense of most Americans. Aronowitz also explores the cultural and political processes by which we have come to describe and accept economics in the United States. He concludes by presenting a concrete plan of action that would guarantee employment and living wages for all Americans.
Amazon


Stanley Aronowitz
How Class Works: Power and Social Movement

Offering an important revision of conventional wisdom, Stanley Aronowitz demonstrates that class remains a potent force in the United States. Aronowitz shows that class need not to be understood simply in terms of socio-economic stratification, but rather as the power of social groups to make a difference. Aronowitz explains that social groups from different economic and political positions become classes when they make demands that change the course of history. For instance, labor movements, environmental activists, and feminists have engaged in class struggles as their demands for power reconfigured the social order. The emerging global justice movements – comprised of activists from heterogeneous social and political backgrounds – also show potential for class formation. Written by a prominent scholar and social activist, this book offers a stunning reconceptualization of the meaning and significance of class in modern America.
For more information on the book, or to order your copy, visit one of these websites:
Amazon.com or Barnes&Noble



Stanley Aronowitz and Heather Gautney
Implicating Empire

Stanley Aronowitz and Heather Gautney have a new book out entitled: IMPLICATING EMPIRE: Globalization & Resistance in the 21st Century World Order. Implicating Empire is the first book to critically examine the various dimensions of globalization and resistance in the 21st century and to integrate them into a wide-ranging analysis.

The book contains chapters from CUNY Professors: Cindy Katz, Professor of Environmental Psychology at the Graduate Center, ["Vagabond Capitalism and the Necessity of Social Reproduction"]; Corey Robin, Professor of Political Science at Brooklyn College, ["Fear, American Style: Civil Liberty after 9/11"]; Bill Tabb, Professor at Queens College and the Graduate Center, ["A Race to the Bottom?"], and Stanley Arronowitz, co-editor and Distinguished Professor of Sociology at the Graduate Center, ["Global Capital and Its Opponents"].

The book also contains chapters from several Graduate Center Students, as well as many other non-CUNY academics. For more information on the book, or to order your copy, visit one of these websites: http://www.amazon.com... or http://search.barnesandnoble.com....



Cynthia Fuchs Epstein and Arne L. Kalleberg, Editors
Fighting for Time: Shifting Boundaries of Work and Social Life

Though there are still just twenty-four hours in a day, society’s idea of who should be doing what and when has shifted. Time, the ultimate scarce resource, has become an increasingly contested battle zone in American life, with work, family, and personal obligations pulling individuals in conflicting directions. In "Fighting for Time," editors Cynthia Fuchs Epstein and Arne Kalleberg bring together a team of distinguished sociologists and management analysts to examine the social construction of time and its importance in American culture.
For more information on the book, or to order your copy, visit one of these websites:
www.amazon.com or www.barnesandnoble.com



Elizabeth and Stuart Ewen
Typecasting: On the Arts & Sciences of Human Inequality

Typecasting chronicles the emergence of the "science of first impression" and reveals how the work of its creators-early social scientists-continues to shape how we see the world and to inform our most fundamental and unconscious judgments of beauty, humanity, and degeneracy. In this groundbreaking exploration of the growth of stereo-typing amidst the rise of modern society, authors Ewen and Ewen demonstrate "typecasting" as a persistent cultural practice. Drawing on fields as diverse as history, pop culture, racial science, and film, and including over one hundred images, many published here for the first time, the authors present a vivid portrait of stereotyping as it was forged by colonialism, industrialization, mass media, urban life, and the global economy.
For more information on the book, or to order your copy, visit one of these websites:
www.amazon.com or www.barnesandnoble.com


Samuel Farber
The Origins of The Cuban Revolution Reconsidered

Analyzing the crucial period of the Cuban Revolution from 1959 to 1961, Samuel Farber challenges dominant scholarly and popular views of the revolution's sources, shape, and historical trajectory. Unlike many observers, who treat Cuba's revolutionary leaders as having merely reacted to U.S. policies or domestic socioeconomic conditions, Farber shows that revolutionary leaders, while acting under serious constraints, were nevertheless autonomous agents pursuing their own independent ideological visions, although not necessarily according to a master plan.
www.amazon.com
www.barnesandnoble.com


Nancy Foner
In A New Land: A Comparative View Of Immigration

Drawing on a wealth of historical and contemporary research, and written in a clear and lively style, In a New Land provides fresh insights into the dynamics of immigration today and the implications for where we are headed in the future. Centering her analysis on New York City, Nancy Foner focuses on race and ethnicity, gender, and transnational connections. Through an original comparative approach, Foner contrasts today's Latin American, Asian, and Caribbean newcomers with eastern and southern European immigrants a century ago and with immigrants in other major U.S. cities. Looking beyond the U.S., the book compares West Indian immigrants in New York with those in London. And, more generally, it views the process of immigrants’ integration in New York against other recent immigrant destinations in Europe.
For more information on the book, or to order your copy, visit one of these websites:
www.amazon.com or www.barnesandnoble.com


Nancy Foner and George M. Fredrickson
Not Just Black and White: Historical and Contemporary Perspectives on Immigration, Race, and Ethnicity in the United States

Immigration is one of the driving forces behind social change in the United States, continually reshaping the way Americans think about race and ethnicity. How have various racial and ethnic groups—including immigrants from around the globe, indigenous racial minorities, and African Americans—related to each other both historically and today? How have these groups been formed and transformed in the context of the continuous influx of new arrivals to this country? In "Not Just Black and White," editors Nancy Foner and George M. Fredrickson bring together a distinguished group of social scientists and historians to consider the relationship between immigration and the ways in which concepts of race and ethnicity have evolved in the United States from the end of the nineteenth century to the present.
For more information on the book, or to order your copy, visit one of these websites:
www.amazon.com or www.barnesandnoble.com

Francis Fox Piven
Challenging Authority:How Ordinary People Changed America

What do the American Revolution, the Abolitionist movement, the labor movement, and the Vietnam antiwar movement have in common? These are examples of the profound moments in American history when ordinary Americans collectively and persuasively told the government ENOUGH! /Challenging Authority/ argues that ordinary people exercise extraordinary political courage and power in American politics when, frustrated by politics as usual, they rise up in anger and hope, and defy the authorities and the status quo rules that ordinarily govern their daily lives. By doing so, they disrupt the workings of important institutions and become a force in American politics.
For more information on the book, or to order your copy, visit this website:  http://www.rowmanlittlefield.com/



Childhood Socialization (Social Problems and Social Issues)

Gerald Handel
Childhood Socialization, 2nd edition.(ed.)

 

 

 

 



Gerald Handel(with Spencer Cahill and Frederick Elkin)
Children and Society: The Sociology of Children and Childhood Socialization

Children and Society presents a comprehensive sociological portrayal of children and childhood from birth to the beginning of adolescence. A major theme is the tension between children's active agency and the socializing influences of the family, school, peer groups, and mass media. The book incorporates the most recent research and theories of childhood socialization. Its theoretical perspective is primarily symbolic interactionism which emphasizes the development of the self. The volume features research that documents cultural variations within American society shaped by social class, race and ethnicity, and gender. For more information, visit: http://www.roxbury.net/cas.html



Samuel Heilman
Sliding to the Right: The Contest for the Future of American Jewish Orthodoxy

Written by one of this country's leading experts on American Judaism, this book offers a snapshot of Orthodoxy Jewry in the United States, asking how the community has evolved in the years since World War II and where it is headed in the future. Incorporating rich details of everyday life, fine-grained observations of cultural practices, descriptions of educational institutions, and more, Samuel Heilman delineates the varieties of Jewish Orthodox groups, focusing in particular on the contest between the proudly parochial, contra-acculturative haredi Orthodoxy and the accomodationist modern Orthodoxy over the future of this religious community. What emerges overall is a picture of an Orthodox Jewry that has gained both in numbers and intensity and that has moved farther to the religious right as it struggles to define itself and to maintain age-old traditions in the midst of modernity, secularization, technological advances, and the pervasiveness of contemporary American culture.
For more information on the book, visit this website:
http://www.ucpress.edu/books/pages/9494.html


Charles Kadushin
The American Intellectual Elite

There are almost as many works about intellectuals as there are intellectuals. Perhaps this is because intellectuals are masters of the word and their mastery is often used to write about themselves. Indeed, with the possible exceptions of sports figures and film actors, intellectuals may be the most overpublicized people in America. In this classic study, originally published in 1974, Charles Kadushin examines the attitudes of that class of people known as the American intellectual elite.
Barnes&Noble.Com


Philip Kasinitz, John H. Mollenkopf and Mary C. Waters
Becoming New Yorkers: Ethnographies of the New Second Generation

Almost two-thirds of New Yorkers under the age of 18 are the children of immigrants. This second generation shares with previous waves of immigrant youth the experience of attempting to reconcile their cultural heritage with American society. In "Becoming New Yorkers," noted social scientists Philip Kasinitz, John Mollenkopf, and Mary Waters bring together in-depth ethnographies of some of New York’s largest immigrant populations to assess the experience of the new second generation and to explore the ways in which they are changing the fabric of American culture.
For more information on the book, or to order your copy, visit one of these websites:
www.amazon.com... or
www.barnesandnoble.com...
 

William Kornblum
At Sea in the City: New York from the Water's Edge

"From Ellis Island to Coney Island and all docks in between, one man sets sail and discovers New York from a fresh perspective.

"New York is a city of few boundaries. And though the land itself may end at the water, the city does not. Some people, like William Kornblum, still see the city as an urvan archipelago, shaped by the water and the people who have sailed it for goods, money, pirate's loot, and freedom.

"Kornblum-New York City native, longtime sailor, and urban sociologist-has spent decades plying the waterways of the city in his ancient sailboat, Tradition. In At Sea in the City, he takes the reader along as he sails through his hometown, revealing the history of the city's waterfront and maritime culture and the stories of the men and women who made the water their own.
--Taken from publisher's website.

For more information about the book, the author, or ordering the book, visit Alogonquin's website at: http://www.algonquin.com/kornblum/.



Peter Kwong and Dusanka Miscevic
Chinese America: The Untold Story of America's Oldest New Community
               
Chinese America is a landmark analysis that draws on firsthand reporting in Asia and the US. Offering a new picture of the country's development, Kwong and Miscevic provide the first comprehensive report on the suburban immigrant communities that are transforming America. Urban ghettos continue to host some of the country's poorest immigrants, but Chinese Americans now live in the suburbs in similar proportions to whites—and have brought with them Chinese supermarket chains, language schools, and growing clout in America and Asia. Exploring the burgeoning trade—and underlying conflicts—between China and the US, Chinese America reveals the complex connections between immigration, globalization, and foreign policy in our time.



Judith Lorber
Breaking the Bowls: Degendering and Feminist Change

Breaking the Bowls is a sequel to Paradoxes of Gender. Paradoxes laid out the weight of gender as a social institution. Breaking the Bowls shows the cracks, anomalies, and resistances that are breaking down the gendered social order in Western post-industrial societies and lays out the ways we can take the process further by deliberate degendering.
Lorber argues that it is time to rebel against gender as a social institution – to challenge its basic processes and practices. She calls for a rebellion against the division of everyone into “women” and “men” and all that is built on that division -- work organizations, social relationships, everyday life, power, and culture. Feminists have tried to restructure and change the dynamics of interaction between women and men, to redress gender imbalances in politics and control of valued resources, to alter gender discriminatory social practices, and to challenge the invisibility and “naturalness” of what is taken for granted about women and men. But they have not pushed these agendas to the point of calling for the abolition of gender boundaries and categories, with the goal of doing away with them altogether. Lorber says that if the gendered structures of social orders is to be dismantled, undoing gender has to be the ultimate feminist goal.
This book is available at the W.W.Norton website:
http://www.wwnorton.com/college/titles/soc/bowls/


Judith Lorber and Lisa Jean Moore
Gender & the Social Construction of Illness: Second Edition

Judith Lorber and Lisa Jean Moore consider the interface between the social institutions of gender and Western medicine and offer a distinct feminist viewpoint to analyze issues of power and politics concerning physical illness. The book covers gender and the social construction of illness, social epidemiology, the health professions, disability, PMS and menopause, genital surgeries, AIDS, and feminist health care.

The book is available at the Altamira website: http://www.altamirapress.com/Catalog/Multibook.shtml    



Pyong Gap Min
Asian Americans:  Contemporary Trends and Issues


With the liberalization of the U.S. immigration law of 1965, the number of Asian Americans in general - and several Asian ethnic groups in particular - has increased. Although this volume examines the Asian American community overall, chapter authors address the major Asian American groups: Chinese, Japanese, Filipino, Indian, Korean, Vietnamese, Laotian, and Cambodian. Unique in its approach, Asian Americans takes a social-scientific look at the issues and obstacles of each group. Some of the issues explored are occupational and economic adjustment, assimilation and ethnicity, intermarriage, intergroup relations, demographic patterns, and marital and family adjustment. The chapters also discuss the impact of migration on traditional customs and values of Asian Americans as well as their impact on U.S. economy, politics, education, culture, and intergroup relations in cities. 
Amazon.com
Barnes & Noble


Pyong Gap Min
Encyclopedia of Racism in the United States:  Three Volumes

Racism has plagued the United States since its inception. The underside of American history is filled with the reality of racism--the decimation and removal of the Indians, slavery, Jim Crow, internment camps for Japanese Americans, the "crime" of driving while black, border patrols, and the Patriot Act, to name some examples. This set covers the period from colonial times until today and all the groups discriminated against at one time or another: Arabs and Muslims, who are the most recent targets, blacks, Asians, the indigenous, Latinos, European immigrants, and Jews. It is the first work to explore the magnitude of the explosive issue and does so in a non-inflammatory manner. More than 450 essay entries present key terms, organizations, movements, incidents, forums, texts, individuals, legislation, theories, and the like.
Amazon
Barnes & Noble


Robert Perinbanayagam
Games and Sports in Everyday Life

Games of many kinds have been played in all cultures throughout human history. This wide-ranging book explores the social and psychological processes involved in the playing of games.  One player (or team) seeks to outwit another by undertaking various physical and communicative moves--not unlike conversations. Games have well-formed "narrative" structures, analogous to myths, that are enacted by each participant to give play to his/her self and its attendant emotions. These plays of the self enable each agent to seek adventures and heroic moments. Going beyond the myth-making and catharsis that may be achieved by individuals, the author shows how games have been devised and played in particular societies and eras as means of promoting specific ideologies of a society, even social ideals such as utopias.
Amazon


Samuel Heilman
Death, Bereavement, and Mourning:  What We Have Learned After 9/11

The contributions to this volume are based on a conference held in New York on the first anniversary of September 11, 2001. Contributors include Peter Metcalf, Robert Jay Lifton, Ilana Harlow, Robert A. Neimeyer, Samuel Heilman, and Neil Gillman. This sensitive and heartfelt volume relates specifically to issues of death, bereavement, and mourning in the aftermath of the attack on the World Trade Center, but the applications to other individual and catastrophic events is obvious. The contributions do not simply explore how people deal with bereavement or are psychologically affected by extreme grief: they address how people can try to find meaning in tragedy and loss, and strive to help restore order in the wake of chaos. The multidisciplinary perspectives include those of anthropology, psychology, theology, social work, and art.


Natalie J. Sokoloff with Christina Pratt
Domestic Violence at the Margins:
Readings in Race, Class, Gender & Culture ( Rutgers University Press)

This anthology reorients the field of domestic violence research by bringing long-overdue attention to the structural forms of oppression in communities marginalized by race, ethnicity, religion, sexuality, or social class." "Reprints of the most influential research work in the field as well as more than a dozen newly commissioned essays explore theoretical issues, current research, service provision, and activism among Latinos, African Americans, Asian Americans, Jewish Americans, and lesbians. The volume rejects simplistic analyses of the role of culture in domestic violence by elucidating the support systems available to battered women within different cultures, while at the same time addressing the distinct problems generated by that culture.


Barbara Katz Rothman
Weaving A Family: Untangling Race and Adoption
 
Fifteen years ago, sociologist Barbara Katz Rothman and her husband decided that they wanted to have another child, and chose to adopt. They welcomed Victoria, a beautiful black baby girl, into their family. “I knew,” Rothman writes, “when I offered to raise Victoria, that I would be raising a child in one world for another, that there are separate worlds of black and white in America—and that however my life tries to straddle and spread and blur the lines, the lines do exist here, and it is a line she has to cross.”
In Weaving a Family: Untangling Race and Adoption, Rothman draws from her experiences as the white mother of a black child to examine the themes of motherhood, adoption, and race in America. Provocative questions and family anecdotes are fused with Rothman’s research to provide both a personal and a sociological look at the many questions involved in transracial adoption. What, exactly, are the challenges—and loving rewards—of raising a child with an with an ethnic or racial identification different from one’s own? Has the adoption process been altered by a society grounded in consumerism? How can white parents participate in shaping the racial identity of a black baby?
Rothman seeks to clarify the delicate issues and uncertainties that are faced by the seven hundred thousand interracial families formed through adoption in America today. She considers, for example, how the shift from the family as a haven to a product of economy applies to parenting, analyzes common images of white parents bringing up black children—such as pet, trophy child, protégé—and scrutinizes the problems of entitlement that linger as an adopted child matures. “A white woman, a white family, raising a black child is on a journey,” she writes. “Race only means something, only exists, because of racism; if it weren’t stigmatized, there would be no race.”
This book is available for pre-order (official release date is May 8th) at the following website:
http://www.beacon.org/catalogs/sp05/rothman.html

 

Samuel W. Bloom
The World as Scalpel: A History of Medical Sociology

"A doctor can damage a patient as much with a misplaced word as with a slip of the scalpel." This statement, from Lawrence J. Henderson, a famous physician whose name is part of the lore of the basic science of medicine, epitomizes the central theme of potent for harm, how equally powerful they can be to help if used with disciplined knowledge and understanding. Nowhere does this simple truth apply more certainly than in the behavior of a physician.

Medical sociology studies the full social context of health and disease, the interpersonal relations, social institutions, and the influence of social factors on the problems of medicine. Throughout its history, medical sociology has struggled between advocacy and objectivity, between the demand to be active and applied and to have the legitimacy of science. The story of medical sociology divides naturally into two parts: the pre-modern, represented by various studies of health and social problems in Europe and the United States until the second World War, and the modern post-war period. The modern period has seen rapid growth and the achievement of the full formal panopoly of professionalism.

This engaging account documents the development of professional associations, official journals, and programs of financial support, both private and governmental. Written by a distinguished pioneer in medical sociology, THE WORLD AS SCALPEL is a definitive study of a relatively new, but critically important field.
~Published by Oxford University Press
Click here for ordering information.
 



Sharon Zukin
Point of Purchase: How Shopping Changed American Culture
(New York: Routledge, 2004)

Both a history and a critique of consumer society, POINT OF PURCHASE examines the experience of shopping by telling the stories of ordinary yet heroic shoppers, and by tracing the social spaces in which we shop--from the shiny novelties of Woolworth's to the discount bargains of Wal-Mart, and from the mail-order catalogs of the 19th century to eBay and Amazon today.  Along the way, we learn the history of "lifestyle" from the pages of consumer guides and discover the differences in shopping by teenagers, mothers, men, women, and Internet addicts.  Conceived in the spirit of Walter Benjamin and Pierre Bourdieu, this book moves toward the integration of economic and cultural sociology.
For more information on the book, or to order your copy, visit one of these websites:
Amazon.com
Barnes & Noble


Sharon Zukin
After the World Trade Center: Rethinking New York City

Sharon Zukin, of the sociology Program and Brooklyn College, and Michael Sorkin, head of the urban design program at City College, have published a book of essays by New York Urbanists entitled After the World Trade Center: Rethinking New York City (Routledge, 2002). The essays make the point that New York City has been at war or suffered disasters several times during the past two hundred years, and that Lower Manhattan has been made and re-made not only by the building of the World Trade Center in the 1960s and 70s, but also by the role of Wall Street in the global financial system, the importance of real estate interests in local development, and the desire to create both landscapes of power and public spaces of mingling and cultural fusion. Though the authors anticipate political conflicts over future rebuilding plans, they urge that the attack on the World Trade Center on September 11, 2001 not usher in a new era of fiscal cutbacks, but lead to a renewal of the city's progressive promise.

 

Marnia Lazreg

Torture and the Twilight of Empire: From Algiers to Baghdad, Princeton University Press

Was released on December 5, 2007.

(Link: http://press.princeton.edu/titles/18524.html).

She was also interviewed about her book on WBAI, “Law and Disorder” Program, on December 17, 2007.
The Maison Française, Columbia University, will be hosting a book launch event on February 7, 2008 and a book party has tentatively been scheduled for Feb. 20th or 27th in Sociology lounge at GC.

Congratulations to Marnia!

 

Stephen Steinberg

Race Relations: A Critique, Stanford University Press


The book was featured in the Research & Books column in the Chronicle of Higher Education (November 16, 2007).

Congratulations to Prof. Steinberg!