Moore is a qualitative, medical sociologist with expertise in science and technology studies, gender and sexuality studies, critical body studies and animal studies. She has published seven books and several articles in wide-ranging journals such as Social Text, Hypatia, Ethnography, and Science, Technology and Human Values. Catch and Release: The Enduring yet Vulnerable Horseshoe Crab explores how humans literally harvest the life out of the horseshoe crabs. We use them as markers for understanding geologic time, collect them for agricultural fertilizer, and eat them as delicacies, capture them as bait, then rescue them for conservation, and categorize them as endangered. Buzz: Urban Beekeeping and the Power of the Bee is based on a collaborative multi-sited ethnography of urban beekeepers in the NYC area. This work with sociologist Mary Kosut investigates the socio-cultural relationship between humans and bees, focusing on how bees become meaningful to human life, and how humans have created conditions of their necessity to bees’ survival. This book won the 2014 Distinguished Scholarship Award from the American Sociological Association's Animals and Society Section. In 2007, she published Sperm Counts: Overcome by Man’s Most Precious Fluid a qualitative research project which analyzes historical documentation of biomedical and contemporary representations from reproductive scientists, semen banking promotional materials on the Internet, children’s "facts of life" books, pornography, forensics transcripts, and sex workers’ narratives, and participant observation. Her collaborative book with Monica J. Casper entitled Missing Bodies: The Politics of Visibility draws on varied approaches to examine six provocative sites where some human bodies are highly visible while others are not represented at all, with important consequences for social action and policy. The book calls for a new, systemic, and politically engaged “ocular ethics,” one grounded not merely in representations but also in analysis of social structures. With Judith Lorber, Moore has written two books. Gendered Bodies: Feminist Perspectives offers a feminist interpretation of prenatal to after-death gendered bodies, men’s as well as women’s, of different abilities, racial ethnic identities, ages, sexualities, and social classes. Gender and the Social Construction of Illness considers the interface between the social institutions of gender and Western medicine and offers a distinct feminist viewpoint to analyze issues of power and politics concerning physical illness. The edited collection The Body Reader: Essential Social and Cultural Readings, a collaborative effort with Mary Kosut, charts the field of the “sociology of the body” by establishing a collection of well-known writing combined with original essays solicited to address particular theoretical and conceptual needs. In 2014, the textbook The Body: Social and Cultural Dissections, written with Monica J. Casper, offers a comprehensive and accessible overview of sociological and cultural perspectives on the human body. Organized along the lines of a standard anatomical textbook delineated by body parts and processes, this volume subverts the expected content in favor of providing tools for social and cultural analysis.
Book Series
Moore is the co-founder and co-editor, with Monica Casper, of the book series for NYU Press titled . Authors in the series include :de:Thomas Lemke|Thomas Lemke, Janet Shim, Carrie Friese, Joan Wolf, and Cassandra Crawford.