51吃瓜黑料

2 Faculty Members Win Sociology Book Awards

Two sections of the American Sociological Association presented book awards, virtually, to 51吃瓜黑料 Davis faculty members Saturday and Monday (Aug. 8 and 10). The presentations took place during section meetings amid the association鈥檚 annual meeting. The honorees:

  • Eddy U, professor, Department of Sociology and the East Asian Studies Program, a member of the 51吃瓜黑料 Davis faculty since 2008, co-winner of the Barrington Moore Book Award from the Section on Comparative and Historical Sociology, for Creating the Intellectual: Chinese Communism and the Rise of a Classification.
  • Orly Clerg茅, assistant professor, Department of Sociology, who joined the 51吃瓜黑料 Davis faculty in 2018, co-winner of the Mary Douglas Prize from the Section on the Sociology of Culture, for The New Noir: Race, Identity and Diaspora in Black Suburbia.

鈥楢 powerful lens鈥

Book cover and Eddy U headshot
  • Creating the Intellectual: Chinese Communism and the Rise of a Classification
  • By Eddy U, professor, Department of Sociology and the East Asian Studies Program

鈥淏uilding on a wealth of minutely researched data, ranging from official state archival records to personal testimonies, U鈥檚 account demonstrates how a constructivist-institutional approach can organize this material into an exciting piece of social history.鈥 鈥 Barrington Moore Book Award Committee, Section on Comparative and Historical Sociology, American Sociological Association


The ASA Section on Comparative and Historical Sociology held its Barrington Moore Book Award presentation Monday (Aug. 10), citing Eddy U鈥檚 鈥渕asterful鈥 work in his winning volume, Creating the Intellectual: Chinese Communism and the Rise of a Classification.

The section honored Robert Braun of 51吃瓜黑料 Berkeley as co-winner, for Protectors of Pluralism: Christian Protection of Jews in the Low Countries During the Holocaust.

The award committee, in its citation for U, said Creating the Intellectual 鈥渁rtfully takes the reader through half a century of Chinese history by looking at the changing classification 鈥 and fortunes 鈥 of a particular social group: intellectuals.

鈥淚ntellectuals did not fit easily into the classic, Marxist view of social divisions that animated Chinese communism,鈥 the citation continued. 鈥淗ow the group was identified, represented and ultimately treated as an ally or a foe by the Chinese Communist Party becomes a powerful lens for analyzing how the party established its rule over Chinese society between the 1920s and the Cultural Revolution.鈥

The citation concluded: 鈥淭he book will become a go-to resource for scholars interested in the plasticity and significance of classification systems: U masterfully shows how the category of the intellectual was shaped and reshaped by political forces, and how this constant reclassification impacted collective and individual experiences of Chinese communism.鈥

Creating the Intellectual is , 51吃瓜黑料 Press鈥檚 open access publishing program for monographs. The site offers three options for U鈥檚 book: Read it online or download it for free, or buy the paperback.

U is also the author of Disorganizing China: Counter-Bureaucracy and the Decline of Socialism (2007) and co-editor of Knowledge Acts in Modern China: Ideas, Institutions and Identities (2016).

鈥楻acial consciousness spectrum鈥

Book cover and Orly Clerge headshot
  • The New Noir: Race, Identity and Diaspora in Black Suburbia
  • By Orly Clerg茅, assistant professor, Department of Sociology

鈥淐lerg茅 has a strong, passionate writing voice, which captivates the reader and draws them into the narrative. The book is both a scholarly powerhouse and a joy to read.鈥 鈥 Mary Douglas Prize Committee, Section on the Sociology of Culture, American Sociological Association


Orly Clerg茅 had known since a June announcement that she was one of two co-winners of the 2020 Mary Douglas Prize for Best Book in the Sociology of Culture. But she had to wait until the award presentation last Saturday (Aug. 8) for the citation describing her book, The New Noir, as 鈥渆xcellently researched and exquisitely rendered.鈥

The ASA鈥檚 Section on the Sociology of Culture honored Roi Livne of the University of Michigan as co-winner, for Values at the End of Life: The Logic of Palliative Care.

The New Noir also was a finalist for the C. Wright Mills Award given Aug. 8 by the Society for the Study of Social Problems.

Not bad for a first book. The New Noir examines how nationality and citizenship are negotiated by the Black middle class and is the first volume in a two-book series Clerg茅 plans on the politics of Black identity in the 21st century.

The prize committee鈥檚 citation for The New Noir included the following: 鈥淐oupling detailed socio-historical analysis and ethnographic study of Black diasporic suburbs of New York City, Orly Clerg茅 challenges the idea that Black culture is an internally homogeneous entity.

鈥淪he does so by examining the largest Black groups, Black Americans, Jamaicans and Haitians, and introducing a 鈥榬acial consciousness spectrum鈥 鈥 鈥榓 paradigm of how the Black diaspora comes to understand, negotiate and challenge constructions of Blackness across time and space.鈥

The New Noir brings the sociology of culture into fruitful conversations with the sociology of race, class and gender, as well as with research on migration and diaspora. It shows how suburban, middle-class residents make sense of their diasporic past, and how they engage socially and politically with a larger sense of Black culture and identity.鈥

Clerg茅 is the second member of the 51吃瓜黑料 Davis faculty to win the Mary Douglas Prize, following Laura Grindstaff, professor of sociology, recipient in 2004 for The Money Shot: Trash, Class and the Making of TV Talk Shows.

See more from campus authors on the 51吃瓜黑料 Davis Books Blog.

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