Joane Nagel
Dublin Core
Title
Joane Nagel
Description
Joane Nagel
University Distinguished Professor
On Sabbatical Fall 2013
Email: nagel@ku.edu
Personal Web Site
Joane Nagel (PhD Stanford) is a political and cultural sociologist; her work focuses on ethnicities, genders, and sexualities in the US and in the global system, cultural production and construction, social and nationalist movements, American Indian activism, and global climate change. Her recent research includes “Climate Change, Public Opinion, and the Military-Security Complex,” The Sociological Quarterly (2011), “Deploying Race, Gender, Class, and Sexuality in the Iraq War” (with Lindsey Feitz), Race, Gender & Class (2007), “Ethnicity, Sexuality, and Globalization,” Theory, Culture & Society (2006), “Men and Nations” in Handbook of Studies on Men and Masculinity (ed. M. Kimmel, J. Hearn, R.W. Connell, Sage, 2005), Race, Ethnicity, & Sexuality: Intimate Intersections and Forbidden Frontiers (Oxford, 2003), and American Indian Ethnic Renewal (Oxford, 1996). Her current research examines the sociological dimensions of global environmental change, specifically the race, class, gender, and sexual dimensions of climate change.
University Distinguished Professor
On Sabbatical Fall 2013
Email: nagel@ku.edu
Personal Web Site
Joane Nagel (PhD Stanford) is a political and cultural sociologist; her work focuses on ethnicities, genders, and sexualities in the US and in the global system, cultural production and construction, social and nationalist movements, American Indian activism, and global climate change. Her recent research includes “Climate Change, Public Opinion, and the Military-Security Complex,” The Sociological Quarterly (2011), “Deploying Race, Gender, Class, and Sexuality in the Iraq War” (with Lindsey Feitz), Race, Gender & Class (2007), “Ethnicity, Sexuality, and Globalization,” Theory, Culture & Society (2006), “Men and Nations” in Handbook of Studies on Men and Masculinity (ed. M. Kimmel, J. Hearn, R.W. Connell, Sage, 2005), Race, Ethnicity, & Sexuality: Intimate Intersections and Forbidden Frontiers (Oxford, 2003), and American Indian Ethnic Renewal (Oxford, 1996). Her current research examines the sociological dimensions of global environmental change, specifically the race, class, gender, and sexual dimensions of climate change.
Citation
“Joane Nagel,” KU Libraries Exhibits, accessed January 2, 2025, https://exhibits.lib.ku.edu/items/show/6152.