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==Academic career==
==Academic career==
Rose received a [[B.A.]] in [[Sociology]] from [[Yale University]] and a [[Ph.D.]] in [[American Studies]] from [[Brown University]] in 1993.<ref name="tr" /><ref name="tr-brown">{{official website|http://www.brown.edu/Departments/Africana_Studies/people/rose_tricia.html|name=Official website at the Department of Africana Studies, Brown University}}</ref> She has taught at [[NYU]] and the [[University of California at Santa Cruz]].<ref name="tr" /> She specializes in 20th century [[African-American culture]] and [[politics]], [[social history]], [[popular culture]], [[gender]] and [[sexuality]]. Her research interests include [[Black culture|Black cultural]] production, the role of new [[technologies]] and [[ideology|ideologies]] about [[Race (classification of humans)|race]] in [[United States|U.S.]] life, and the politics of [[intimacy]] and [[social justice]]. A central focus of her work is examining the current [[legacies]] of [[racial]] and other forms of structural relations and exploring the [[creative]] and [[visionary]] [[strategies]] developed by [[artists]], [[communities]] and [[movements]] to build a more [[justice|just]] [[society]].<ref name="tr-brown" />
Rose received a [[B.A.]] in [[Sociology]] from [[Yale University]] and a [[Ph.D.]] in [[American Studies]] from [[Brown University]] in 1993.<ref name="tr" /><ref name="tr-brown">{{official website|http://www.brown.edu/Departments/Africana_Studies/people/rose_tricia.html|name=Official website at the Department of Africana Studies, Brown University}}</ref> She has taught at [[NYU]] and the [[University of California at Santa Cruz]].<ref name="tr" /> She specializes in [[20th century]] [[African-American culture]] and [[politics]], [[social history]], [[popular culture]], [[gender]] and [[sexuality]]. Her research interests include [[Black culture|Black cultural]] production, the role of new [[technologies]] and [[ideology|ideologies]] about [[Race (classification of humans)|race]] in [[United States|U.S.]] life, and the politics of [[intimacy]] and [[social justice]]. A central focus of her work is examining the current [[legacies]] of [[racial]] and other forms of structural relations and exploring the [[creative]] and [[visionary]] [[strategies]] developed by [[artists]], [[communities]] and [[movements]] to build a more [[justice|just]] [[society]].<ref name="tr-brown" />


== References ==
== References ==

Revision as of 08:06, 20 December 2010

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Tricia Rose

Professor and Chair of the Department of Africana Studies at Brown University.

Early life

Tricia Rose was born in New York City and spent her childhood in Harlem and the Bronx.[1]

Academic career

Rose received a B.A. in Sociology from Yale University and a Ph.D. in American Studies from Brown University in 1993.[1][2] She has taught at NYU and the University of California at Santa Cruz.[1] She specializes in 20th century African-American culture and politics, social history, popular culture, gender and sexuality. Her research interests include Black cultural production, the role of new technologies and ideologies about race in U.S. life, and the politics of intimacy and social justice. A central focus of her work is examining the current legacies of racial and other forms of structural relations and exploring the creative and visionary strategies developed by artists, communities and movements to build a more just society.[2]

References

External links


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