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Annex Sociology Podcast

Author: Annex Sociology Podcast

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A podcast about academic sociology for academic sociologists
12 Episodes
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In today's episode of The Annex, Daniel Morrison sits down with Krystale Littlejohn to discuss her book Just Get on the Pill (2021, University of California Press).
Daniel Morrison sits down with Hajar Yazdiha (USC) to discuss her book, The Struggle for the People's King (2023, Princeton University Press).
JT Thomas discusses Du Bois in Germany.
Michelle Smirnova discusses the prescription to prison pipeline.
Jonathan Coley discusses his work on mobilizing LGBT on Christian college campuses.
Shai Dromi and Sam Stabler to discuss their new book Moral Minefields: How Sociologists Debate Good Science (University of Chicago Press)
Louise Seamster discusses race, debt and politics.
A discussion about the elite world of political campaigns with Daniel Laurison (Swarthmore)
We explore the relationship between science and money by asking what happens when the money runs out. Guest David Reinecke (Princeton).
Seth Aburtyn (UBC) and Omar Lizardo (UCLA) discuss classical sociology and their Handbook of Classical Sociological Theory.
In today's episode of The Annex, we discuss how Americans misunderstand China and its political system. We imagine a society in which the government controls what people know and what they say.  We hear about government filters and censorship, and how democracy activists are punished for their speech.  But is it all so simple? In this episode of The Annex Live, we will sit down to learn the details of China's political and government system with two experts.  Ya-Wen Lei (Harvard University) is is the author of The Contentious Public Sphere: Law, Media, and Authoritarian Rule in China (Princeton University Press), a book that examines the development of the Chinese public sphere through during the Internet revolution.  Emily Chua (National University of Singapore) is the author of the upcoming The Currency of Truth: Newsmaking and the Late-Socialist Imaginaries of China's Digital Era (University of Michigan Press), a book about the detailed inner workings of the Chinese media and how these relationships shape journalism and governance in that country.
Some manifestations of racism are easily identifiable.  Practices that do things like promoting racial residential segregation, facilitating race-based job discrimination, or the unequal application of criminal law across races are clear examples of social behaviors that harm people of color and perpetuate white supremacy.  Others are difficult to see, even when looking directly at them.  In this episode, we will discuss how white supremacy subtly suffuses culture through a look at Raul Perez's new book, The Souls of White Jokes: How Racist Humor Fuels White Supremacy (2022, Stanford University Press), and related work being done in the Sociology of Racial and Ethnic Minorities. Our panelists include: Raul Perez (University of La Verne) Ann Morning (New York University) Victor Ray (University of Iowa) CLICK HERE FOR THE YOUTUBE STREAM
Comments (2)

shikha sourav

It is interesting to know such moral issues underlying our discipline. thanks for bringing this issue.

Dec 2nd
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Isaac Martinez

just nauseating non-sense from people who love to stroke eachother egos and give a gross of self declared intelectual status. gross

Mar 20th
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