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Jerome Krase <jerrykrase@aol.com> Brooklyn College of The City University of New York My primary interest is what makes it possible for people who are different from each other to share urban residentional spaces. My approach has over the decades been termed variously as "phenomenological," "symbolic-interactionist," and most recently "social semiotics." I call what I do simply "sociology." In recent years I have been exploring these issues photographically. |
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Address: | 563 Ninth Street Brooklyn, New York 11215 United States |
Secondary Phone: | 718 951 5314 |
Fax Number: | 718 951 5639 |
Web Page: | https://brooklynsoc.org/blog |
H-Net Positions: | H-Net Council |
List Affiliations: | Emeritus List Editor for H-TransItalian Studies Reviewer for H-Urban |
Interests: | American History / Studies Anthropology Educational Technology Ethnic History / Studies Research and Methodology Sociology Urban History / Studies World History / Studies |
Bio: Emeritus and Murray Koppelman Professor, Sociology at Brooklyn College, CUNY, I have an Indiana University (Bloomington)BA and a New York University Ph.D. in Sociology. Books include: "Race and Ethnicity in New York City", and "Ethnic Landscapes in an Urban World." (with Ray Hutchison), "Self and Community in the City," "Ethnicity and Machine Politics" (with Charles La Cerra),and "The Review of Italian American Studies" (with Frank Sorrentino). Recent articles include: “Feliks Gross: Between Assimilation and Multiculturalism," The Polish Review, 52, 2, 2007: 171-87; “Minority Entrepreneurship in New York,” in Dana (ed) Handbook Of Research On Ethnic Minority Entrepreneurship, 2007: 267- 278; “Visualisation du changement urbain,” Societes, 1, 95, 2007: 65-87; “Seeing Ethnic Succession in Little and Big Italy,” in Meier and Frers (eds) "Encountering Urban Places" 2007: 97-118. “Ethnic Crossroads: Toward a Theory of Immigrant Global Neighborhoods,” in "Ethnic Landscapes in an Urban World", 2007. With Tarry Hum: 97-119, and “Seeing Ethnic Succession in Little Italy,” "Modern Italy," 11, 1, 2006: 79-95. Recent papersinlcude "American Cities as Visually Contested Terrain: Turkish and Other Moslems," Turkish Cultural Studies Association, Sile, Turkey, September, 2007; “Visually/Symbolically contested terrains,” European Commission on Urban Anthropology, Tirana Albania, September, 2007; “Visualizing Changing Polonia" Polish Institute of Arts and Sciences in America. Washington, DC, June, 2007; "Little Italy as Visually Contested Terrain" Global Village Interdisciplinary Conference,New York Institute of Technology, February, 2007; “The Visual Presentation of Community” EU Transatlantic Security Roundtable 4, Educating for Migrant Integration, University of Toronto, September, 2006; and “The Peopling of New York City.” International Visual Sociology Association, University of Urbino, Urbino, Italy. July 4, 2006. Currently I am on the Board of the International Visual Sociological Association. and the CUNY Academy of Humanities and Sciences. Other important affiliations are the American Sociological Association's Community and Urban Sociology Section, The European Commission on Urban Anthropology, The Polish Institute of Arts and Sciences in America, and The Polish American Historical Association. |