Society & Space Book Review:: Uneven trading: Gieseking on Harris
My most recent book review of Tina Harris‘ Geographical Diversions: Tibetan Trade, Global Transactions (UGA Press) is now up on the Society …
My most recent book review of Tina Harris‘ Geographical Diversions: Tibetan Trade, Global Transactions (UGA Press) is now up on the Society …
To honor Jim Blaut’s efforts, the award will recognize a scholar who, over the course of her/his life, has used a geographic and historical analysis of capitalism to explain current social injustices and inequalities, and promoted activism against oppressive power relations both within and outside the academy. Award winner Cindi Katz is Professor of Geography in Environmental Psychology & Women’s Studies at the Graduate Center of the City University of New York.
In the spring of 2013, I taught Queer(ing) New York as a Seminar in the City course with the Center for Lesbian …
Lauren Berlant Society and Space lecture at the #AAG2015 Chicago on Friday, April 24th, 2015. Find the abstract for the “Affects of the Commons” talk at https://mail.google.com/mail/u/0/#inbox/14cee71fe9fb758f?compose=14cf692f75e22b37.
To honor Jim Blaut’s efforts, the award will recognize a scholar who, over the course of her/his life, has used a geographic and historical analysis of capitalism to explain current social injustices and inequalities, and promoted activism against oppressive power relations both within and outside the academy. Award winner Cindi Katz is Professor of Geography in Environmental Psychology & Women’s Studies at the Graduate Center of the City University of New York.
This session brings together compelling scholars within diverse intellectual traditions in educational research to discuss corresponding and sometimes competing definitions of justice. Each panelist will respond to a set of questions designed to reveal the salient points of convergence and difference between Indigenous studies, critical disabilities studies, critical race studies, immigration and border studies, and queer studies in education. A noted critical discussant will synthesize perspectives, offer ideas for future inquiry, and prompt further discussion between the panelists.
Today is Equal Pay Day, a day I much admire because it is 1/365th of the reminder we need as a society …
I am blissfully attending and participating in the Feminist Social Justice Conference at San Diego State University, a Workshop on Participatory and …
The following is a post I recently shared with the American Friends of Alexander von Humboldt Foundation blog in reflection to the …
My esteemed and inspiring colleague, Kate Driscoll Derickson at UMN, sent around an email of her favorite teaching resources. There are so …
I am sharing my slides from my talk today, “Sustaining Difference during Gentrification: NYC & Berlin Since 2008,” at the Alexander von …
My essay, “Steps toward Recognition through Openness and the Virtual,” below was written for the Bowdoin Museum College of Art virtual exhibit …
Tonight at the Bowdoin College Museum of Art, we will be hosting an opening for the virtual exhibit, “Fifty Years Later: The …
On October 30th, 2014, I appeared on Huffington Post Live “Queer Voices” to discuss my first blog post, “On the Closing of …
We are pleased to announce that The People, Place, and Space Reader is the bestselling Planning & Urban Design title of 2014! …
After reading the recent announcement that The Lexington Bar, the last and only lesbian bar of San Francisco, would be closing, I …
In May 2013, I taught Queer(ing) New York (CLAGSqNY) at the Center for Lesbian and Lesbian Studies (CLAGS) at The Graduate Center of …
It’s surely the beginning of the semester at Bowdoin College this week but I am grabbing some time to reflect on the …
One of students recently emailed me about the Yo App. Like many people (including the “The Colbert Report”), she was not at …
Some time ago now, my chapter “Queering the Meaning of ‘Neighborhood’: Reinterpreting the Lesbian-Queer Experience of Park Slope, Brooklyn, 1983-2008” came out …