Teal Rothschild

Teal Rothschild headshot
Teal Rothschild, Ph.D.Chair Department of Anthropology+Sociology and Professor of Sociology

Contact Information

(401) 254-3059trothschild@rwu.eduCAS 132

Education

B.A. Bard College
M.A., Ph.D. New School of Social Research

"Challenge power, organize change, for all"

Dr. Rothschild is an historical sociologist whose research has always focused on the intersections of social movements, activism,  and identity. Rothschild’s interests surround the larger questions of how movements shape individuals and groups both within movements and beyond, with specific attention to issues of racialization, privilege, power, discourse, victimization, and representation in a variety of contexts within the United States. More recent social movements she has studied include: Redneck Revolt, Gun Violence Prevention Activism, and The Day Without An Immigrant Protests of 2006.

Currently, Rothschild is engaging in a new United States-based national ethnographic and interview-based project focusing on the projection of activism on to librarians, with attention to how librarians make sense of this themselves.

Selected Publications

image of book cover, An Ethnography of Gun Violence Prevention Activists: “we are thinking people, by Dr. Teal Rothschild(2022) Catherine Simpson Bueker, Teal Rothschild.Global by the Seaside”. Contexts. American Sociological Association Journal. Spring 2022, Volume 21, Number 2, pp. 24-29

(2019) “Multiplicity in movements: the case for Redneck Revolt.” Contexts. American Sociological Association Journal. Summer 2019, Volume 18, Number 3, pp.57-59.

(2018): An Ethnography of Gun Violence Prevention Activists: “we are thinking people”. Lexington Books.

(2018)  Introduction to Sociology: An Adaption of Open Stax's Introduction to Sociology 2 edition. 2018. 

(2011) An Immigrant, Not a Worker: Depiction of the 2006 ‘Day Without an Immigrant’ Protests in Printed Media of the United States. Journal of Media Sociology. 3 (1-4): 77-89.

(2010) Racialized Masculinity and Discourses of Victimization: A Comparison of the Mythopoetic Men’s Movement and the Militia of Montana. Advances in Gender Research, 13 (1).

Selected Presentations

(2016). “An Informal Discussion Roundtable: Tightrope Walking: Role of Researcher and Activist in Ethnographic Studies of Social Movements”, American Sociological Association. Seattle, Washington.

(2010). “Anti-immigrant sentiment and dehumanization: Representations of The Day without an Immigrant Protests” in Investigating Countermovement Dynamics. Eastern Sociological Society Annual Meeting. Boston: Massachusetts.

Selected Interviews Quoted In

Iqbal, Mawa. “Left Wing Groups Take Up Arms in Name of Abolitionist John Brown.” Flatlands.  Kansasic City Public Television 19, Inc. Kansas City PBS, July 23, 2020. 

Seymart, Thomas. “Coronavirus, violences policières, Trump... Aux Etats-Unis, la gauche radicale s'arme aussi” Euronews.fr. 

Courses Taught

ANSOC 105 Introduction to Sociology
ANSOC 205 Social Stratification
ANSOC 215 Sociological Perspectives on Race
ANSOC 325 Constructing Gender
ANSOC 345 Globalization and Identity
ANSOC 355 Comparative Immigration
ANSOC 375 Comparative Social Movements and Social Change
ANSOC 400 Senior Seminar
 

Professional Service

American Sociological Association Member 1994-present

ASA Section on Collective Behavior and Social Movements: mentor to graduate students

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