University of Pittsburgh

People

Suzanna Crage , PhD

Indiana University, Bloomington IN, 2009 Suzanna Crage

Title: Assistant Professor
Campus Address: 2613 Wesley W. Posvar Hall
Tel: 412-648-7587
E-mail: scrage@pitt.edu
Website: www.suzannacrage.com

 

Curriculum vitae

Fields

Sociology of Culture, Political Sociology, Social Movements, Immigration, Nationalism Globalization, Collective Memory, and Social Theory

Teaching

Cultural Sociology, Sociology of Immigration in the US, Introduction to Sociology,
Examining College Life: Problems and Controversies, & Sociology of Culture (graduate)

Selected Publications

2009. Crage, Suzanna. “Ideological Conflict and Refugee Aid Policy in Munich.”
German Politics 18 (1): 71-95.

2006. Armstrong, Elizabeth and Suzanna M. Crage. “Movements and Memory: The
Making of the Stonewall Myth.” American Sociological Review 71 (5): 724-751.

2001. Valenti, JoAnn M. and Suzanna M. Crage. “Moving Sustainability onto the Media
Agenda.” In UNESCO, Encyclopedia of Life Support Systems. EOLLS Publishers
Co. Ltd., Oxford.

2001. Tough Girls: Women Warriors and Wonder Women in Popular Culture. Women's
Studies 30: 277-280. (Review Essay)

Honors and Awards

2008. The Atherton-Bean Research Fellowship, Department of Sociology.

2007. ASA Student Forum Travel Award.

2007. Outstanding Article Award, ASA Collective Behavior and Social
Movements Section. “Movements and Memory: The Making of the
Stonewall Myth,” with Elizabeth A. Armstrong.

2007. Graduate Student Paper Award, ASA International Migration
Section. “Policy, Place and Ideas: Refugee Aid Policy in Munich.”

2007. Winner, North Central Sociological Association 2007 Graduate
Student Paper Competition, “How Ideas Matter: The Case of Refugee
Aid Policy in Munich.”

2006. Advanced Department Fellowship, Department of Sociology.

2005. Advanced Department Fellowship, Department of Sociology

Affiliated with

The Global Studies Program, the European Union Center of Excellence, and the Cultural Studies Program.

Projects

Refugee aid policy development in Berlin and Munich

Policymaker claims about collective memories in German policy debates

Competing construction of Germany's past during Berlin commemorations of the60th anniversary of the end of World War II in Europe