48 results on '"Embrick, David G."'
Search Results
2. White sanctuaries: race and place in art museums
3. "Every Place Has a Ghetto...": The Significance of Whites' Social and Residential Segregation
4. Discontents Within the Discipline : Sociological Hypnagogia, Negligence, and Denial
5. Sociology for Whom? Real Conversations and Critical Engagements in Amerikkka.
6. Minimizing the Roots of a Racialized Social System: Ignoring Gender—Lethal Policing and Why We Must Talk More, Not Less, About Race and Gender
7. “Two-faced -isms: racism at work and how race discourse shapes classtalk and gendertalk.”
8. Alienation, Racial Capitalism, and the Racialization of Palestinians.
9. Protecting Whiteness : Whitelash and the Rejection of Racial Equality
10. Discursive Colorlines at Work: How Epithets and Stereotypes are Racially Unequal
11. Tearing Down to Take Up Space: Dismantling White Spaces in the United States.
12. The Cultural and the Racial: Stitching Together the Sociology of Race and Ethnicity and the Sociology of Culture.
13. Working Class Masculinity: Keeping Gay Men and Lesbians out of the Workplace
14. “I Did Not Get that Job Because of a Black Man...”: The Story Lines and Testimonies of Color-Blind Racism
15. Are Blacks color blind too?: An interview-based analysis of Black Detroiters’ racial views
16. The Mothers and Fathers of the Sociology of Race and Ethnicity: Learning from Them in Eight Lessons.
17. White Space(s) and the Reproduction of White Supremacy.
18. White Sanctuaries: White Supremacy, Racism, Space, and Fine Arts in Two Metropolitan Museums.
19. Racial microaggressions: Bridging psychology and sociology and future research considerations.
20. There and Back Again: Reflections on Where We Were At, Where We Are Now, and Where We are Going.
21. Decolonizing a Discipline: Rethinking Sociology in a Changing World.
22. The Emotional Work of Family Negotiations in Digital Play Space: Searching for Identity, Cooperation, and Enduring Conflict.
23. More than Just Insults: Rethinking Sociology's Contribution to Scholarship on Racial Microaggressions.
24. Graduate Students of Color: Race, Racism, and Mentoring in the White Waters of Academia.
25. Race and Ethnicity in Contemporary Vietnam.
26. Introduction: A Framework for Understanding the Race and Ethnic Transition.
27. Thinking Diversity, Rethinking Diversity.
28. Working at the Intersection of Race and Public Policy: The Promise (and Perils) of Putting Research to Work for Societal Transformation.
29. Paving the Way for Future Race Research.
30. Two Nations, Revisited: The Lynching of Black and Brown Bodies, Police Brutality, and Racial Control in ‘Post-Racial’ Amerikkka.
31. Interdisciplinarity, Post-disciplinarity, and Anomic Specialization.
32. The White Pages: Diversity and the Mediation of Race in Public Business Media.
33. Negotiating Family Conflict, Social Identity and Solidarity in Digital Play Space.
34. 'Can't We All Just Get Along?': Assessing Actors' Racial Views through Interviews and Everyday Conversations.
35. Humanist Sociology: Rekindling the Spirit of Alfred McClung Lee.
36. Racialization and Muslims: Situating the Muslim Experience in Race Scholarship.
37. The Diversity Ideology in the Business World: A New Oppression for a New Age.
38. When Whites Flock Together: The Social Psychology of White Habitus.
39. Race-Talk Within the Workplace: Exploring Ingroup/Outgroup and Public/Private Dimensions.
40. "IT WASN'T ME!": HOW WILL RACE AND RACISM WORK IN 21st CENTURY AMERICA.
41. The Growing Need for Insurgent Black Studies.
42. On the Recent Attacks and Violence toward Progressive Scholars.
43. A Sincere Thanks from the Editorial Office and Moving Forward.
44. Critical Sociology: Special Issue: Critical Studies of Diversity in the Post-Civil Rights Era.
45. PROGRESSIVE IN THEORY, REGRESSIVE IN PRACTICE: A CRITICAL RACE REVIEW OF AVATAR.
46. The Origins of African-American Interests in International Law Eyes Off the Prize: The United Nations and the African American Struggle for Human Rights, 1944–1955.
47. Looking Back, Moving Forward: Memorializing Past Contributions to Humanist Sociology.
48. Book Review: The New Jim Crow: Mass Incarceration in the Age of Colorblindness.
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