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Graduate Students
Abdusabur Abdusamadov: aacp5@mizzou.edu
Charise Albritton: cmahd3@mizzou.edu
Ryan Amundson: maa89@mizzou.edu
Stephen Barnard: srb221@mizzou.edu
After completing a B.A. and M.A. in Sociology at MU, I decided to continue my studies here as a doctoral student. My master’s thesis, entitled “Crooked Coverage: A Study of (De)Racialized Texts in Print Media,” focused on exploring various ways in which print media outlets (de)racialize issues via implicit racial codes and spatial (mis)representation. On top of my overarching interest in media, I am also drawn to the areas of inequalities, social control, deviance, and social movements. Given my longing for social justice and interests in practicing and promoting public sociology, I plan to continue my research and teaching with these ends in mind.
Heather Casey: hncrh7@mizzou.edu
Nicholas Charles: ntcmrb@mizzou.edu
Lloyd
Chia: lc4f3@mizzou.edu
Amanda Clough:clougha@missouri.edu
I am currently a doctoral student at MU. I have completed a B.A. in Sociology
at Mizzou and an M.S. in Criminal Justice at Columbia College. My interests
include criminology, deviance, and social control. My master’s thesis
focused on child rearing and how it impacts juvenile delinquency.
Katherine Collins: krknq6@mizzou.edu
Jennifer Correa: jc9p9@mizzou.edu
I'm a second year Ph.D student at the
University of Missouri - Columbia. My research interests include immigration, race, and the State. However, I am also interested in social movements and Mexican-American studies. As a Mexican-American from south Texas, I developed several interests regarding immigration, identity, race, and the State as a facilitator of social control. I have been so wrapped up in this topic that I decided to take this on as my dissertation project. Social justice and issues related to all minorities are very dear to me. Things in this society (and globally) need to change, and I feel that as sociologists we can be the vehicle/moving force for this change!!
David Criger: dwcwv5@mizzou.edu
David Derossett: dld6wc@mizzou.edu
Priya Dua: pd3d2@mizzou.edu
My areas of research are gender, feminism, and mentoring in graduate education.
I use gender and feminist theory to explore graduate students access to
mentoring structures. I examine how graduate departments facilitate and
constrain the development of a mentoring culture as well. I am currently
doing research on gender differences in graduate students' conceptualizations
of mentoring.
David Elliott: dle46f@mizzou.edu
My long-time implicit interest in social questions grew and became explicit
when I was a business student whose courses included economics and organizational
behavior. Although my formal introduction to social theory was through
economics, it eventually became clear that neoclassical economic theory
and the public policy prescriptions of its adherents were insufficient
to their tasks. I was introduced to sociological theory as a first-year
doctoral student in accounting, and I knew that I had found my intellectual
home at last. (Speaking of homes, I am thrilled to be even a small part
of the great ongoing tradition of this department.) Among the many influences
on me to this point, the main ones have been the Pragmatist philosophers
(especially Dewey and Mead) and the interactionist sociologists who inherited
their general assumptions and perspective. Among the areas of interest
to me now are the sociology of morals and ethics, socio-economics, organizational
theory, including the division of labor and articulation (coordination,
alignment) of work, and human development (socialization, the self and
identities).
Derek Evans: djedz2@mizzou.edu
Karen Foote: kmf21a@mizzou.edu
William Force: wrfrz9@mizzou.edu
As a student of social reality, I engage constructionism, postmodernism/s,
and queer theory in an attempt to develop a more lucid understanding of
how individuals navigate the precarious terrain of social identity. My
work so far has been on topics including punk rock, pro-anorexia, and
sociological "reads" of Chuck Palahniuk's work. I enjoy consuming
theorists named Jean, thrash metal bands with really long song titles,
all things pop cultural, and fruit leather.
Roslyn Fraser:
rsfpp9@mizzou.edu
I am currently a PhD student interested in the sociology of health and illness, specifically women's health, the commodification of health, and health care policy. I am passionate about health care policy issues including health technology, health care rights, Medicare, Medicaid, the overall payment system, policy making, and how policy affects people's lived experiences. I received my B.A. in Anthropology from the University of Nebraska-Lincoln and my M.A. in Sociology from the University of Nebraska-Omaha. After completion of my M.A. courses, I worked for 4 years in Health Services Research (HSR) at the University of Nebraska Medical Center. I was fortunate to have had the experience in HSR where I was included in a variety of research projects. Some of the most influential projects for me were the Nebraska State Planning Grant study of Uninsurance and Underinsurance, the Nebraska Rural Health Works Project, the study of Rural Independent Pharmacies' Experiences with Medicare Part D, the study of Health Care Delivery in Wyoming, the study of Adolescents' Attitudes and Beliefs About Anti-Drug and Alcohol Programs, and (although not directly involved but observed from the sidelines) the Culture of Patient Safety Project.
Daehoon Han: dh6t9@mizzou.edu
Interest Area: Political Sociology, Social movement, Civil Society (Social
movement which is initiated, mobilized, and organized via internet communication
in Korea).
Lindy Hern: lsh8r4@mizzou.edu
Olivia Hetzler: orh013@mizzou.edu
Steve Kehnel: sck3k5@mizzou.edu
My general areas of research are gender/sexuality, shopping/marketing/advertising
discourses (the “production of consumption”), and the relationships
between the body and social/cultural/historical location. Currently, I
am working on ways to chart the relationships between bodily experiences
of biology/physiology, psychology, and larger social-cultural definitions
of masculinity. In other words, how specific ideas of who and how we should
be as men and women, are put into specific practices of “building” environments so as to encourage particularly gendered bodily experiences.
In this work, I will also need to explore a variety of novel approaches
to research and experience embodiment (methodology).
Previously, I have
researched the commodification of masculinity in US culture, the production,
use, and deployment of the marketing category of “metrosexual”
as an organizer (sense-making device) of masculine disruptions, and the
“work” (in the ethnomethodological sense) involved in deploying
the concepts of “bias” and “academic freedom”
to limit critical education. The primary sociological/theoretical inspirations
for this work come from Dorothy E. Smith, Michel Foucault, Zygmunt Bauman,
George Herbert Mead, Judith Butler, Aldous Huxley, James Baldwin, and
Patricia Hill Collins.
Maksim Kokushkin: mk2n8@mizzou.edu
Interests: Organizations, Political Sociology, Post-communist
Countries: how, why, and in what direction organizations in these countries
are developing, what parallels could be drawn between them and the patterns
in the developed capitalist societies. Processes of consolidation in the
business, social, and political spheres. What and why went wrong during
the 10 years of transition to capitalism, if something went wrong. What
the future(s) of former socialist countries could be. Background: MA in
Business Administration – Sofia University (Sofia, Bulgaria), MA
in Sociology — Central European University (Warsaw, Poland).
Candace (Kandi) Korasick: cak307@mizzou.edu
I can't really remember a time when I was not at least somewhat fascinated
with gender and sexuality. I got thrown out of the Hannibal Public Library
when I was 10 for trying to check out inappropriate books. As an adult,
I was still reading books on sexuality, but they were located in the sociology
section of bookstores instead of biology. One day it finally occurred
to me that this was something I could and should pursue as a career. My
current research interests focus on feminism, motherhood and reproductive
control. Furthermore, my personal experience with reproductive medical
professionals had resulted in “Childfree, a website for people who
don't plan to have children (http://www.missouri.edu/~cak307/).
Kathleen Krueger kekgf3@mizzou.edu
I'm a first year PhD student who received my undergraduate degree at Indiana University and my master's at University of Missouri-St. Louis. My primary focus is women's issues, and issues of body image and beauty culture in the United States and across the world. My MA thesis dealt with self-esteem and body-image satisfaction in teenage girls with breast implants. My secondary focus area is poverty and inequality in the United States. Currently, I am serving as a TA for Peace Studies 1050.
Amy Lane: aml705@mizzou.edu
My focus is on integrating my interests in the sociology of religion and
social movements into a project that explores the way religion and religious
organizations are utilized in the labor movement both currently and historically.
I am exploring religions impact during the sit-down strikes that
occurred in the early part of the 20th century in Flint, Michigan, as
well as designing an ethnographic study of interfaith groups that currently
work on labor issues in the State of Missouri.
Lisa Martino-Taylor:
lmvd3@mizzou.edu
I am a completing my PhD with specializations in Political Sociology and
Criminology. My research areas include the health and social effects of
industrial toxins on communities, environmental corporate crime,
chemical and biological weapons, state-corporate crime, globalization,
and political sociology. In April, 2007, I presented a paper, "In the
Shadow of Agent Orange The Broad Impact of the Times Beach Legacy" at
the Midwest Sociological Society in Chicago. I recently appeared in an
international documentary, "Auslandsreporter", regarding chemical
weapons and the Monsanto Company, that aired on German Public
Television. My journal article, "The Military-Industrial-Academic Complex and a New Social Autism", was published in the Journal of Political and Military Sociology; August, 2008 edition.
Jeffrey McCully: jcmbv9@mizzou.edu
I joined the department in 2005. I completed the Masters program in
2007 and am currently working on a PhD with a minor in Women's and
Gender Studies. http://www.missouri.edu/~jcmbv9
Kevin McElmurry: klm143@mizzou.edu
My dissertation examines the intersections of gender, emotion, and media in the production of religious culture within an evangelical Protestant congregation. I bring theoretical contributions from cultural studies, sociology of religion, and recent work on masculinity to show how faith and practice combine in churches weaving traditional and contemporary cultural forms to reach the unchurched. My project details the specific and sometimes contradictory experiences of men and women who draw on a range of resources: institutional, traditional, and mass mediated to live out their faith commitments. My research is supported by the Louisville Institute’s Dissertation Fellowship Program.
I have taught courses in Research Methods, the Sociology of Religion, Culture and Mass Media, Social Change, as well as both large and small format Introduction to Sociology. I completed comprehensive exams in the areas of 1) Theory, Knowledge, and Critical Inquiry, and 2) Culture and Identity. I am interested in teaching Research Methods, Sociology of Religion, Cultural Sociology, and Sociological Theory at the undergraduate and graduate levels. Balancing a strong commitment to undergraduate education with an active research agenda is a priority for me.
Publications include:
McElmurry, Kevin. [Revise and Re-submit.] "Alone Together: Gendered Worship in the Seeker Church." Sociology of Religion.
Tamney, Joeseph B.; Stephen D. Johnson; Kevin McElmurry; and George Saunders. 2003. “Strictness and Congregational Growth in Middletown.” Journal of the Scientific Study of Religion. 42:363-376.
David L. Elliott, Kevin McElmurry, and Peter M. Hall 2003. ”Interactionism and the Construction of Sociology” Journal of Contemporary Ethnography. 32: 467 - 471
Veronica
Medina: vemm93@mizzou.edu
I received my BA in sociology and English from the University of Kansas in 2004. Shortly thereafter I ventured into Tiger Country and completed my MA in May, 2007. “Theorizing American Girl”-- my thesis-- critiques American Girl Inc.’s complex of self-einforcing cultural industries which produce and market both material objects and a whitewashed set of “American” ideologies and values to race- and class-privileged girls. I am especially concerned with American Girl’s perpetuation of the myth that the legacies of Native American and Mexican American internal colonization are individual problems rather than structural problems.
Broadly, my areas of interest include social inequalities and culture and identity. My projects include reconceptualizing the definition of the immigrant second generation to account for parents with differing nativity statuses, push and pull factors of immigration with regard specifically to Missouri’s Latino immigrant population (Cambio Center), and children’s popular culture. I am co-author, along with Olivia Hetzler and David Overfelt, of two articles published by Sociation Today which examine racialized aspects of gentrification. The articles are “Race, Immigration and Economic Restructuring in New Urbanism: New Orleans as a Case Study” and “Gentrification, Displacement, and New Urbanism: The Next Racial Project.”
Gudmundur Oddsson: gfoqpd@missouri.edu
I am a first year masters student from Iceland. My interests lie mostly in Economic Sociology and Inequalities, especially in the so-called „class-less“ Icelandic society. I have a B.Sc. in Business Management, a B.A. in Socio-Economic Development and a GCE – Post Graduate Certificate of Education. I have a background in research, having worked as a researcher for almost three years in the University of Akureyri Research and Development Center parallel to my studies.
Michael Ojibway: maogz4@mizzou.edu
Joshua Olsberg: jeokb4@mizzou.edu
David Overfelt: dlo6d9@mizzou.edu
Most importantly, I am a public sociologist fundamentally interested
in the liberation of all people from oppression. My current research is
interested in the (re)construction of space. I renew the call for sociologists
to give attention to space as a variable that plays a determining as well
as determined role in the sociohistorical shape of our culture. In this,
I argue that we cannot fully understand inequalities and therefore cannot
fully understand how to repair these broken social relations without nderstanding
the role of space and place in (re)creating and reinforcing these inequalities.
I am greatly inspired
by Paulo Friere's, Pedagogy of the Oppressed, and my work in the future
will reflect my desire to create a fully accessible education and do my
part to bring the university out of the ivory tower. I see education of
all kinds as the most empowering tool available to all people. I intend
to spread this tool as far and wide as possible by making sociology into
an accessible and understandable field of research.
In all this I take
a few general sociological perspectives. My overall areas of interest
are in globalization, urban growth, political economy, the inequalities
that are created through these processes, and, most importantly, how to
rid the world of these nequalities.
Todd Platts: tkp97b@mizzou.edu
James
Polk: jtpkt2@mizzou.edu
Adam Rendall: ajrzv6@mizzou.edu
Michael Sickels: msswf9@mizzou.edu
Jenny Schlosser:
jasqk7@mizzou.edu
I completed my M.A. at Mizzou in 2006 which included in-depth interviews with victimless” drug-dealers in prison in an attempt to understand how their loci of control and attributions for incarceration along with institutional rhetoric influence the identities they construct (and are constructed for them) in prison. I am interested primarily in symbolic interactionism, narrative construction, criminology and aspects of identity negotiation among the institutionalized
My first article “Issues in Interviewing Inmates: Navigating the Methodological Landmines of Prison Research” will appear in Qualitative Inquiry volume 15, number 3.
As much as I enjoy doing research, I have an equal love for teaching. I have taught social deviance, criminology, introduction to sociology and sociology of the family. Although, it is hard to say which aspect of academia has impacted me the most, a good balance of research and teaching makes an ideal semester for me.
Jennifer Stafford: jdsn96@mizzou.edu
Colin Suchland:
ces6df@mizzou.edu
I recently returned to school after 5 years working as a small-town journalist.
Besides an obvious interest in all things media, I'm very interested in
inequality and agency. Right now, I'm looking into presentations of poverty
on prime-time television. I am also seeking ways of incorporating audio
and visual elements into my work, including photos and Internet media.
On a personal note, photography remains a passion of mine.
Check out http://www.colinesuchlandphotos.com
to see some of my favorite work.
Jennifer Sukanek:
jasgx6@mizzou.edu
Kuo-Yang Tang: kt46a@mizzou.edu
James Thomas: jmt552@mizzou.edu
Whitley Vale: wwva43@mizzou.edu
My general areas of interest are political sociology, theory and methodology,
and social gerontology.
Jesse VanGerven: jpvxb6@mizzou.edu
I am a second
year masters student here at the University of Missouri. I completed my
undergraduate degree in sociology at Colorado State University, Fort Collins.
My research interests include environmental sociology, political sociology,
and social inequalities. Specifically, I am conducting research on Western
Shoshone and Southern Paiute resistance to the high-level nuclear waste
repository at Yucca Mountain, Nevada. This research will advance current
understandings of Native American political organization, social movements,
and collective action. I am presenting a paper at the Midwest Sociological
Society's annual meeting in 2007 on symbolic land conquest in the courts,
involving the Western Shoshone Nation.
Jennifer Beggs Weber: jjby87@mizzou.edu
Brad Wing: bww3db@mizzou.edu
I am interested in social inequalities, political sociology, and cultural sociology. I am committed to materialist feminist, interactionist, and narrative approaches to sociology. I am currently working on a paper that examines the social organization of the intertwined redevelopment and commemoration processes at the World Trade Center. I combine an analysis of practice with a dialogic analysis of discourse to account for what has been done in the name of that which was lost and to account for what has been done despite the fact of that loss. I am also working on my dissertation. It aims to explore some of the terrain opened up around crisis tendencies in the U.S. gender order. I am interested to understand how it is possible for men to produce progressive or anti-patriarchal masculinity projects. What material and social conditions make practicing such alternative masculinity projects possible (and/or necessary)? What kind of institutional, cultural, and interpersonal support is available to the men who engage in them? What challenges do they face? What forms do alternative masculinity projects take in different contexts (an unbounded group of men engaged in personal projects v. bounded groups of men engaged in collective projects)? Overall, my dissertation is intended to inquire about the cultural and political possibilities such alternative masculinity projects could open up for challenging a gender order organized around Western, white, affluent, heterosexual male domination.
JoVanna Woodward: jswk6b@mizzou.edu
Kendra Yoder: klyd29@mizzou.edu
Samuel (Mark) Youngblood: smy4zc@mizzou.edu
I am currently a master’s student at the University of Missouri. I received my B.A. in Criminology at Missouri State University in 2004 and was a police officer for sixteen years prior to finishing my undergraduate degree. My interests include criminology, deviance, social control and cognitive sociology. My Master’s research is focused on a small mid-western drug court.
Shudong Zhang: sztf8@mizzou.edu
Interest areas: criminology and historical & comparative research
and study
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