MABEL BEREZIN Department of Sociology, Cornell University 346 Uris Hall, Ithaca NY 14853 [email protected] @Mabelberezin
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MABEL BEREZIN Department of Sociology, Cornell University 346 Uris Hall, Ithaca NY 14853 www.mabelberezin.com [email protected] @mabelberezin February 21, 2021 Academic Appointments Associate to Full Professor, Sociology, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY. 2002 to present. Chair, Sociology, 2010 – 2014 Field Member: Government; Peace Studies Professeur Invité. CERI: Centre de recherche dédié aux sciences sociales de l’international, Sciences-Po, Paris, France, 2011 Professeur Invité, École des Hautes Études Sciences Sociales, Paris, France, 2001 Visiting Associate Professor, Geography/Sociology; UCLA, Los Angeles, CA, 1996 – 2001 Assistant Professor, Sociology; University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA, 1989 – 1996 Lecturer, Social Studies; Harvard University, Cambridge, MA, 1987 – 1989 Research Areas Sociology of Culture; Political Sociology; Comparative Historical Sociology; Qualitative Research Methods; Classical and Contemporary Social Theory; Political Communication; Political Geography; Comparative Politics of Europe. Education Ph.D., Sociology, Harvard University, 1987 Mabel Berezin, 2 Books The End of Security and the Rise of Populism. [Working Title] NY: Oxford University Press. Under Contract. Illiberal Politics in Neoliberal Times: Culture, Security, and Populism in the New Europe. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2009. Translation. Turkish, Neoliberal Zamanlarda Liberal-Olmayan Politikalar, trans. Enis Köksaldı. Istanbul Bilgi Üniversitesi Yayınlar Press, 2011. Books in Conversation: “New Directions in Studying the Old and New European Right.” 18th International Conference of Europeanists. Barcelona, Spain (June 20-22), 2011. Honorable Mention, Book Prize, Political Sociology Section, American Sociological Association, 2010. Author Meets Critics Session. 34rth Annual Meeting of the Social Science History Association, Long Beach CA (November 12-15). Critics Comments published in Trajectories with Author Response, Vol. 21 (2): Spring 2010, pp. 7-21, 2009. Book Talk with invited critics. Center for European Studies, University of California, Los Angeles. Los Angeles, Ca. (October 22), 2009. Author Interview. ROROTOKO (September 25), 2009. http://rorotoko.com/interview/20090925_berezin_mabel_illiberal_politic_neoliberal_securi ty_populism_europ/?page=2 Reviewed in: American Journal of Sociology; Contemporary Sociology; Acta Sociologica; Choice; French Politics, Culture and Society; Journal of Common Market Studies; Journal of Canadian Sociology; Journal of Modern History; Journal of World-Systems Research; E-Extreme Newsletter; European Political Science (Review Essay); Perspectives on Politics; Political Science Quarterly; West European Politics. Europe without Borders: Re-mapping Territory, Citizenship and Identity in a Transnational Age. [Co-edited with Martin Schain]. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 2003. Selected for inclusion in Annual Report FY 2004: A Distinctive Edge: Research at Cornell, Office of the Vice Provost for Research at Cornell University. Selected for inclusion in JP Morgan's Top Ten Summer 2004 Reading List "based upon the quality of the content, the timeliness of the appeal, and the expertise of the authors" Reviewed in: American Journal of Sociology; Contemporary Sociology; Social Forces; Cambridge Review of International Affairs; Geopolitics; Journal of Common Market Studies; Journal of Contemporary European Studies; Choice; Perspectives on Political Science; European Integration; Journal of Multilingual and Multicultural Development. Making the Fascist Self: The Political Culture of Inter-war Italy. In the "Wilder House Series in Culture, Politics and History." Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1997. Co-Winner of J. David Greenstone Prize for Best Book of 1996-1997 in "Politics and History" given by the American Political Science Association, 1998. Named an "Outstanding Academic Book of 1997", by Choice, 1998. Awarded Honorable Mention, Book Prize, Culture Section, American Sociological Association, 1998. Mabel Berezin, 3 Reprinted, pages 241-255 in Fascism: Critical Concepts in Political Science, Volume 3, eds. Roger Griffin and Matthew Feldman. London: Routledge, 2003. Reviewed in: American Journal of Sociology; Contemporary Sociology; Social Forces; Journal of Modern Italian Studies; American Historical Review; Times Literary Supplement; Comparative Studies in Society and History; Choice; Contemporary European History (review essay); Italian Politics and Society: Newsletter of CONGRIPS. Publications [sorted by subject area] I. Illiberal Politics: Nationalism, Fascism and Right Extremism Forthcoming. “Illiberal and Liberal Identities: Thinking Through the Boundaries.” In Handbook of Illiberalism, Andras Sajo and Stephen Holmes, eds. NY: Routledge. 2019a “Fascism and Populism: Are They Useful Categories for Comparative Sociological Analysis?” Annual Review of Sociology 45: 345-61. 2019b “#OnArrive — But Where Are We?: Unpacking the electoral performance of Europe’s nationalist right.” Public Seminar (May 31) https://publicseminar.org/essays/onarrive-but- where-are-we/. 2019c “Past is Prologue: Electoral Events of Spring 2012 and the Old “New” Nationalism in Post- Security Europe.” In Populism and the Crisis of Democracy, Gregor Fitzi, Jurgen Mackert and Bryan S. Turner, eds. Volume 1. Concepts and Theories. London: Routledge: 109-29. 2018 [Co-authored with Thomas Davidson], “Britain First and the UK Independence Party: Social Media and the Movement Party Dynamic.” “Special Issue: Contesting Trump.” Mobilization 23 (4): 485-511. 2017 “Populism as Collateral Damage: Opportunities for Comparative Analysis.” Trajectories: Newsletter of the Comparative and Historical Sociology Section of the American Sociological Association 28(3): 2-4. http://asa-comparative-historical.org/newsletter/Trajectories_Spring_2017.pdf 2015a “Extremist Politics Before and After Charlie Hebdo.” Global Dialogue 5 (1), June. http://isa- global-dialogue.net/extremist-politics-before-and-after-charlie-hebdo/ 2015b "Globalization Backlash." In Emerging Trends in the Social and Behavioral Sciences, Robert Scott and Stephen Kosslyn, eds. Hoboken, NJ: John Wiley and Sons. http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/9781118900772.etrds0151/abstract 2013 “The Normalization of the Right in Post-Security Europe.” In Politics in the Age of Austerity, Armin Schaefer and Wolfgang Streeck, eds. UK: Polity Press: 239-261. 2012 “Sovereign Debt and Nationalism: Normalizing the European Right.” States, Power and Societies: Newsletter of the Political Sociology Section of the American Sociological Association 17 (1): Mabel Berezin, 4 (Winter) 5-6. 2009 “Fascism,” The Concise Blackwell Encyclopedia of Sociology, George Ritzer and J. Michael Ryan, eds. London: Wiley-Blackwell. 2007a “Revisiting The French Front National: The Ontology of a Political Mood.” (Special Issue: Racist and Far Right Groups) Journal of Contemporary Ethnography 36 (2) (April): 129-146. 2007b “Globalization” In Europe Since 1914: Encyclopedia of the Age of War And Reconstruction, John Merriman and Jay Winter, eds. Volume 3 Detroit: Charles Scribner’s Sons: 1242-1245. 5 Volumes 2007c “Fascism.” In The Blackwell Encyclopedia of Sociology, George Ritzer, ed. Oxford: Blackwell: 1644-1647. 2007d “Post-Nationalism.” In The Blackwell Encyclopedia of Sociology, George Ritzer, ed. Oxford: Blackwell: 3676-3577. 2007e “Between Zollverein and Patrie: The French National Front, the ‘New’ April 21 and the Rejection of the European Constitution.” Available at Mario Einaudi Center for International Studies, Working Paper Series, #9-07, Cornell University. 2006a “The Festival State: Celebration and Commemoration in Fascist Italy.” The Journal of Modern European History. 3 (1): S. 60-74. 2006b “Appropriating the ‘No:’ The French National Front, the Vote on the Constitution, and the ‘New’ April 21.” PS: Political Science and Politics 39 (April): 269-272. 2006c “Xenophobia and the New Nationalisms.” In Handbook of Nations and Nationalism, Gerard Delanty and Krishan Kumar, eds. London: Sage Publications: 273-284. 2004 "Reasserting the National: The Paradox of Populism in a Transnational Europe." Prepared for Invited Thematic Panel, "Citizenship and Identity in a Unifying Europe, American Sociological Association Meetings, 2004. Available at Center for the Study of Economy and Society, Working Paper Series, #21, Cornell University Department of Sociology. (http://www.economyandsociety.org/wp-content/uploads/2013/08/wp21_berezin_04.pdf) 2003 “Martiri del Fascismo.” In Dizionario del fascismo, vol. 2, eds. Victoria de Grazia and Sergio Luzzatto. Turin: Einaudi: 101-102. 2002 “Commemorazione.” In Dizionario del fascismo, Vol. 1. Victoria de Grazia and Sergio Luzzatto, eds. Turin: Einaudi: 101-102. 1998-9 “Making the Fascist Self". Clio 9 (Fall/Winter): 5, 39-41. 1996 “`The Dead are Equal': History Making, Moral Relativism and the Rise of the New Italian Right." Comparative Study of Social Transformation (CSST), Working Paper #109; Center Mabel Berezin, 5 for Research on Social Organization (CRSO), Working Paper #534, University of Michigan. (https://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/handle/2027.42/51298). 1990 "Created Constituencies: Fascism and the Italian Middle Classes." In Splintered Classes: Politics and the Lower Middle Classes in Interwar Europe. Rudy Koshar, ed. New York: Holmes and Meier: 142-63. 1988 "The Content of No Content: The State, Theater and Social Meaning in Fascist Italy". Working Paper 0002, Center for Research on Politics and Social Organization, Department