
Chair of the Sociology Department, Assistant Professor of Sociology
B.A., Grinell College; M.S., Virginia Commonwealth University; Ph.D., University of Connecticut
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Professor of Sociology
B.A., Baylor University; M.A., Ph.D., Vanderbilt University
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My primary areas of interest include political economy, international social development and environmental issues. Courses I teach include Community and Social Problems. I conduct research on the Caribbean Basin and have recently traveled to such places as Guatemala, Panama, Barbados, Curacao, Guyana, Belize, and Cuba. I bring those experiences to my teaching about developing countries and society. Outside academia, I have been involved in work in the Caribbean for The Nature Conservancy.
After years of doing analyses about how economic and political factors translate into social development among nations, I was increasingly interested in the Caribbean-- a place well-traveled but poorly understood -- and the essential link there between people and environments. Since that region relies heavily on its natural beauty, assembling long-term strategies for sustainable resource use are urgently needed.
I encourage my students to learn sociology by applying it — using it to discover how it is connected to their lives in practical ways. For example, my teaching of conservation, land use, and other environmental issues stresses that these are necessarily people issues. Conventional development policies, poverty, international inequality, and lack of opportunities in education or through viable alternative practices put enormous pressures on natural environments.
The value of putting alternative practices into place became vividly clear during a recent trip arranged through the Quillian Visiting Scholars program. A few colleagues and I were privileged to spend weeks among the Makushi, an indigenous group living deep inside the rain forest in Guyana. They were mixing their traditional subsistence farming with new crops that have an international market (e.g., cashews and dried fruits). More exciting, they had begun a nascent eco-tourism business catering to international tourists. Their expertise as guides and cooks provides for jobs while preserving the rain forests.
Simultaneously, they preserve their language and culture, since young people are less prone to migrate elsewhere in search of opportunity. The on-going efforts of my students and colleagues to raise money and send supplies in support of the Makushi’s eco-tourism business have been particular rewarding.
Visiting Instructor in Sociology
B.A., SUNY Geneseo; M.A. (Womens Studies), Ph.D. Candidate (Sociology), University at Albany, SUNY
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Daniel Farr is a doctoral candidate in Sociology at the University of Albany, SUNY, where he previously earned his MA in Women’s Studies.
He has published a number of pieces addressing masculinity, sexuality, and culture. Among these, he has published book chapters and journal articles examining varied topics at the intersections of LGBT studies, sexualities, and media, including works on: tomboy craigslist personal ads, transgender craigslist personal ads, televisions programs/film including The L-Word, Queer as Folk, and Pushing Daisies, and Khush (queer Indian documentary film), bear identities, and sissy-boyhood.
In additional to his doctoral research on Parental Aspirations Among Young Gay Men he has recently guest edited several special journal issues, including: Men and Masculinities in Women’s Studies (Women’s Studies), Fat Masculinities (Men & Masculinities), and Global Lesbian Cinema (Journal of Lesbian Studies). Additionally, he is editing an anthology on the Stargate film/television series.
Associate Professor of American Culture Studies
B.A., East Stroudsburg University; M.A., Ph.D., Bowling Green University
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Professor Rodriguez has published articles on baseball, basketball, boxing, and the performance of masculinity in sports films.
He is currently working on a book-length project examining the role of neo-conservative foreign policy in action-adventure films released during George W. Bush’s presidency.
In the summers he tirelessly, but fruitlessly, tries to break 80 on the golf
course, quitting the game on a regular basis. The winter brings snowboarding and
the to-date successful attempt not to break anything. Sports have always been
central to his work and leisure. They instruct and inform his personal and
professional search for a comprehensive understanding of the male gender.