Sociology for Dark Times

Sanjiv Gupta

Everything all at once: Wars. Pandemics. Climate change. Neoliberalism. Authoritarianism. White supremacy...Every month, I ask a fellow sociologist the following questions: How can we, as sociologists, intervene in this moment, individually or collectively? How has their work changed over the last few years in response to the times? What are their sources of hope for change?

Episodes

  1. 08/04/2024

    Campus activism across the spectrum. Amy Binder, Johns Hopkins University

    Over the last few months, students on college campuses all over the world have been protesting the mass slaughter in Gaza. I was one of the majority of faculty at UMass Amherst who supported our students’ encampment, and then opposed our administration’s violent assault on it. In this episode I talk with Amy Binder, whose book with Jeffrey Kidder, The Channels of Student Activism: How the Left and Right Are Winning (and Losing) in Campus Politics Today (2022) is one of the few analyses of student activism on U.S. college campuses after 2016. Their study is based in flagship state schools like mine, and is unusual in its inclusion of student activists across the political spectrum. This conversation was a much needed opportunity to reflect on the events of last year. Amy Binder is a Stavros Niarchos Agora Professor of Sociology at Johns Hopkins University. She is Interim Director of the SNF Agora Institute, founded in 2017 to diagnose the problems facing liberal democracies, encourage dialogue and participation through public events, and to offer courses in the study of democracy. Before her recent move to Johns Hopkins, Amy was on the sociology faculty at the University of California San Diego. Please join me at the invited thematic session at ASA in Montreal next week, Sociology for Hope. The panelists represent a range of substantive interests and career stages, from graduate student to emeritus faculty.

    1h 10m
  2. 08/16/2023

    Relational inequality! Prudence Carter, former ASA President / Brown University

    Our conversation previews a few themes from Prudence’s presidential address at the ASA annual meeting in Philadelphia this weekend. Prudence identifies key deficiencies of liberal democracies like the U.S. that have allowed the social and political regression we’re witnessing now. She has some pointed suggestions for what we sociologists should be doing in this regressive moment. Specifically, we discuss the case of affirmative action in the U.S.  Prudence Carter is the Sarah and Joseph Jr. Dowling Professor of Sociology at Brown University. Before that, she was Dean of the Graduate School of Education at Berkeley. Her research focuses on academic inequalities based on race, ethnicity, class, and gender in the United States and elsewhere. Her books include the award-winning Keepin’ It Real: School Success beyond Black and White (2005), and Stubborn Roots: Race, Culture, and Inequality in U.S. & South African Schools. Prudence is my first guest to highlight the importance of 'relational' factors and inequalities. I also really appreciated her urging us to do interdisciplinary work. As Prudence has learned first hand, academia does not make this easy for us, and even penalizes us for doing it, but we need to do it anyway. Like Joya Misra, the next president of ASA, Prudence also urges us to communicate directly with those who make things happen in the real world. Like Joya, she highlights our undergraduate students as agents of change. https://www.brown.edu/academics/sociology/people/prudence-carter

    57 min
  3. 07/18/2023

    Labor on the move! Eric Blanc, Rutgers University

    Is organized labor in the U.S. making a comeback? Over the last few years, unionization efforts have proliferated across the service sector, in Amazon, Trader Joe’s, Starbucks, just to name a few. The movie and TV industry is facing rare, simultaneous strikes by writers and actors. By early August, more than 300,000 UPS workers may be on strike, which would be the largest private sector strike in the US in several decades. My guest this month is Eric Blanc, assistant professor of labor studies at Rutgers University. Eric studies strikes, new workplace organizing, digital labor activism, and working-class politics. He is also a longtime labor activist, currently serving as organizer trainer for the Emergency Workplace Organizing Committee, a collaboration of the Democratic Socialists of America (DSA) and United Electrical Workers of America. Full disclosure: I am also a member of the DSA. Eric is author of, among other books, Red State Revolt: The Teachers’ Strike Wave and Working-Class Politics (Verso 2019). His writings have appeared in journals such as Politics & Society, and also in The Nation, The Guardian, and Jacobin. Following my conversation with Nadia Kim last month about age and optimism, I wanted to talk to an early-career sociologist. Eric was recently a graduate student in Sociology at NYU, making him my youngest guest so far. I started out as usual by asking Eric for his take on whether we’re living through especially dark times. Like Anna Branch in May, Eric takes the long view, even with regard to climate change. Given the current weather all over the world, I find Eric’s optimism about climate change heartening, even as I am unable to share it fully. The wave of labor activism and the possibility of a large strike at UPS in a few weeks is indeed energizing. Eric’s assertion of the need for sociologists to work with, and for, activist organizations echoes Nadia Kim’s call last month. Our discussion of the larger political implications of labor activism for democracy in the U.S. was especially illuminating for me; it echoes my conversation with Cedric De Leon of the UMass Labor Center in February. Join me in August for a conversation with Prudence Carter, outgoing president of the American Sociological Association. Hope you have a good summer till then! https://ericblanc.org https://laborpolitics.substack.com/

    53 min

Ratings & Reviews

5
out of 5
2 Ratings

About

Everything all at once: Wars. Pandemics. Climate change. Neoliberalism. Authoritarianism. White supremacy...Every month, I ask a fellow sociologist the following questions: How can we, as sociologists, intervene in this moment, individually or collectively? How has their work changed over the last few years in response to the times? What are their sources of hope for change?