51小黄车

Jayati Lal

Visiting Associate Professor

Areas of Expertise

gender, global capitalism, neoliberalism, labor, transnational feminism, social reproduction, ethnography, global South, post/decolonial theory and epistemologies, India.

Education

Ph.D., Cornell University

Biography

Jayati Lal is a Visiting Associate Professor in the Department of Sociology and Anthropology. Her scholarly interests include transnational feminism, post and decolonial studies, neoliberalism and capitalism in the Global South, South Asia and India, the sociology of gender and sexuality, and labor studies. She holds a Ph.D. in Sociology from Cornell University, Master鈥檚 degrees in Sociology from Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University and Jawaharlal Nehru University in New Delhi, and a BA (Honors) in Psychology from Indraprastha College at Delhi University. She has previously taught in gender studies and sociology at Cornell University, Boston College, New York University, Johns Hopkins University, the University of Michigan Ann Arbor, American University, Syracuse University, Wake Forest University, Ambedkar University Delhi, and Seoul National University. She was an Andrew Mellon postdoctoral fellow at John鈥檚 Hopkins University and has been a fellow at the Jawaharlal Nehru Institute for Advanced Study in Delhi. Her research has been published in Signs: The Journal of Women in Culture and SocietyFeminist Studies, Critical Sociology, and The Sociological Review, among other venues. She was a co-Director and co-principal investigator for the feminist digital archival project on at the University of Michigan, which produced an audiovisual record of interviews with feminists, women鈥檚 studies scholars and movement activists from several countries. In addition to conducting interviews for this project, she co-directed the , and provided a recent as part of the podcase series, Contextualizing Feminist Voices.

Her ongoing book project, Making Factory Women: The Labor of Gender in Late Twentieth-Century Indian Capitalism, develops a postcolonial materialist feminist approach that integrates historical, archival, and long-term ethnographic research on women factory workers in New Delhi. Other current research projects focus on gender, consumer culture, and constructions of neoliberal selfhood among the middle class in North India.

Courses

  • The Sociological Perspective
  • Gender and Society