Evelyn Nakano Glenn
Evelyn Nakano Glenn is a Professor of the Graduate School at the University of California, Berkeley. In addition to her teaching and research responsibilities, she served as Founding Director of the University's . The CRG is a leading U.S. academic center for the study of intersectionality among gender, race and class social groups and institutions. In June 2008, Professor Glenn was elected President of the 15,000-member American Sociological Association. She served as President-elect during the 2008–2009 academic year, assumed her presidency at the annual ASA national convention in San Francisco in August 2009, served as President of the Association during the 2009–2010 year, and continued to serve on the ASA Governing Council as Past-president until August 2011. Her Presidential Address, given at the 2010 meetings in Atlanta, was entitled "Constructing Citizenship: Exclusion, Subordination, and Resistance," and was printed as the lead article in the American Sociological Review.
Professor Glenn's scholarly work focuses on the dynamics of race, gender, and class in processes of inequality and exclusion. Her early research documented the work and family lives of heretofore neglected women of color in domestic service and women in clerical occupations. This work drew her into historical research on the race and gender structure of local labor markets and the consequences of labor market position on workers, including the forms of resistance available to them. Most recently she has engaged in comparative analysis of race and gender in the construction of labor and citizenship across different regions of the United States.
Evelyn Nakano Glenn is author of ', ', "From Servitude to Service Work", and '. She is also editor of ', and . Additionally, Professor Glenn is the author of many journal articles, reviews, and commentaries. A review of her most recent book, Forced to Care stated, "Glenn's prose is concise and elegantly crafted, and despite the complexity of the subject matter, the reader is swept along with the force of the narrative structure."
Biography
Born in 1940 in California to Nisei parents in California, Glenn was incarcerated from 1942 to 1945, along with more than 120,000 other Japanese Americans, in concentration camps. Glenn's family was first assigned to live in the horse stables at a race track in Turlock, California, and thereafter was sent to the Gila River camp in the Arizona desert, and then to the Heart Mountain camp in the high country of Wyoming. When her family was released in 1945 they moved to Chicago, where Glenn was raised until the age of 16.Professor Glenn received her BA from the University of California, Berkeley, and her PhD from Harvard University. Her first academic position was as Assistant Professor of Sociology at Boston University; she has also taught at Florida State University, Binghamton University, and was a Visiting Professor at the University of Hawaii. She has been at the University of California, Berkeley since 1990.
Teaching
Glenn has taught a variety of courses having to do with research methods and theory in the social sciences, women and work, the Asian American family, comparative gender systems, race and social structures in the United States, and graduate seminars in gender, race, and class.Associations
- American Sociological Association, 1972–present
- Society for the Study of Social Problems, 1976–present
- Sociologists for Women in Society, 1983–present
- Pacific Sociological Association
- Massachusetts Sociological Association
- Association for Asian American Studies
Awards
- 2015 Asian American & Asian Disapora Studies Award, UC Berkeley
- 2013 KQED Asian American Local Heroes Award
- 2012 awarded by the Society for the Study of Social Problems 2011 at its national convention, August 2012.
- 2011 C.Wright Mills Award, for her book "Forced to Care," awarded by Society for the Study of Social Problems.
- 2007 Sociologists for Women in Society, .
- 2005 , American Sociological Association "in recognition of outstanding scholarship that has enlarged the horizons of sociology to encompass fully the role of women in society".
- 2004 Outstanding Book Award, American Sociological Association Section on Asia and Asian Americans, for her book "Unequal Freedom".
- 2004 Distinguished Contribution to Scholarship Award, Pacific Sociological Association, for her book "Unequal Freedom".
- 2003, American Sociological Association, Section on Racial and Ethnic Minorities, for "Unequal Freedom".
- 2003 Outstanding Achievement in Scholarship Award, American Sociological Association Section on Race, Gender, and Class, for "Unequal Freedom".
- 2001 Visiting Scholar, , University of Wisconsin, Madison, WI.
- 1994 Outstanding Alumna Award, Japanese Women Alumnae of the University of California.
- 1994 Nikei of the Biennium Award for Outstanding Contributions to Education, Japanese American Citizens League.
- 1993 Association of Black Women Historians, Leititia Woods Brown Memorial Article Prize for "From Servitude to Service Work: Historical Continuities in the Racial Division of Paid Reproductive Labor."
Selected publications
Books
- Forced to Care: Coercion and Caregiving in America, Harvard University Press, 2010.
- Shades of Difference: Why Skin Color Matters Stanford University Press, 2009.
- Unequal Freedom: How Race and Gender Shaped American Citizenship and Labor, Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 2002.
- Mothering: Ideology, Experience and Agency, Evelyn N. Glenn, Grace Chang, and Linda Forcey, New York: Routledge, 1994.
- Issei, Nisei, Warbride: Three Generations of Japanese American Women in Domestic Service, Philadelphia: Temple University Press, 1986.
- Hidden Aspects of Women's Work, Christine Bose, Roslyn Feldberg, and Natalie Sokoloff, with the Women and Work Research Group, New York: Praeger, 1987.
Recent articles
- "Caring and Inequality" in Sharon Harley et al., Women's Labor in the Global Economy: Speaking in Multiple Voices, Rutgers University Press, 2007.
- "Whose Public Sociology? The Subaltern Speaks, But Who Is Listening?" in Dan Clawson, Robert Zussman, Joya Misra, Naomi Gerstel, Randall Stokes, Douglas L. Anderton and Michael Burawoy, Public Sociology: Fifteen Eminent Sociologists Debate Politics and the Profession in the Twenty-first Century, Berkeley: University of California Press, 2007.
- "Race, Labor, and Citizenship in Hawai'i," in Donna Gabaccia and Vicki Ruiz American Dreaming, Global Realities: Rethinking U.S. Immigration History, Urbana and Chicago: University of Illinois Press, 2006.
- "Race, Labor and Citizenship in Hawai'i," in Donna R. Gabaccia and Vicki L. Ruiz American Dreaming, Global Realities: Rethinking U.S. Immigration History.
- "Citizenship and Inequality," in Elizabeth Higginbotham and Margaret L. Anderson, Race and Ethnic in Society: The Changing Landscape.
- "Gender, Race and Citizenship," om Judith Lorber Gender Inequality: Feminist Theory and Politics.
- "Citizenship and Inequality: Historical and Global Perspectives" in A. Kathryn Stout, Richard A. Dellobuono, William Cambliss, Social Problems, Law, and Society.
- "From Servitude to Service Work: Historical Continuities in the Racial Division of Paid Reproductive Labor," Signs: Journal of Women in Culture and Society, Fall 1992). .