Jack Katz
Professor of Sociology, UCLA
Department of Sociology
University of California
at Los Angeles
Los Angeles, CA 90095 –
1551
office phone: (310) 825 -
6904; FAX: (310) 206 9838
EDUCATION:
Northwestern University
Degree: Ph.D. (Sociology),
1976.
University of Chicago Law School
Degree: J.D., 1969.
Colgate University
Degree: B.A., 1966.
FACULTY CAREER:
Yale Law School, 1977 - 1979. Research
Associate.
UCLA, Assistant Professor of Sociology,
1979; Associate Professor, 1982; Professor, 1989.
MISCELLANEOUS PROFESSIONAL
EXPERIENCE:
Russell Sage Law and Society Fellow, 1973 -
1975, Yale Law School.
Consulting Editor, American Journal of
Sociology, 1977 - 1979; Associate Editor, Symbolic Interaction, 1995 - 1999; American
Sociological Review, 2001 -4; current: Editorial Boards: Western Criminology
Review, Theoretical Criminology, Ethnography, Social Psychology, Passions in Context.
Trustee, Law and Society Association, 1984
- 1986.
Consulting for university presses, law and
social science journals, defense in death penalty cases.
Co - Editor, with Robert Emerson, of “Field
Encounters and Discove ries,” an ethnographic book series for the University of
Chicago Press
TEACHING SPECIALIZATIONS:
Social Interaction and Phenomenology;
Ethnographic Methods; Urban Sociology.
HONORS and INVITED LECTURES:
Cooley Award, SSSI, 1989; Hans W. Mattick lecturer,
University of Illinois, 1989; Snortum lecturer, Association of Criminal Justice
Research, 1989; Pacific Sociological Association annual scholarship award,
1990; Invited Professor, University of Paris, 8, 1991 - 1992; Stanley L. Common
lecturer, Uni on Theological Seminary, fall 1992; Fortunoff Criminal Justice
speaker, NYU, 1998; fellow, Center for Advanced Studies in the Behavioral
Sciences, 2000 - 2001; Invited Professor, EHESS, Paris, November 2001 ; College
de France, November 2001 ; Law & Society Ce nter, Boalt Hall law school,
2004; CUNY, Princeton, Columbia, Univer sity of Chicago law school, 2004;
University of Southern California, 2005; Loyola Marymount AKD, 2007 ; Waernska
professuren, University of Gothenburg, 2008 ; Carleton University, Emotions M
atter conference, 2009; Italian Ethnography workshop, University of Bergamo,
2009.
BOOKS:
1.
Poor
People’s Lawyers in Transition. New Brunswick: Rutgers. 1982.
Excerpts in T. Ehrlich and G.C.Hazard, Jr., Going to Law School?,
Boston: Little Brown, 1975; R. Abel, ed., Lawyers:
A Critical Reader. New York: New Press. 1997.
2.
Seductions
of Crime. New York: Basic Books. 1988.
Reprints: “Seductions and Repulsions of Crime,” in Decision Making: Alternatives to Rational Choice Models, M. Zey,
ed. Newbury Park: Sage. 1992. pp. 140-157; “Seductions and Repulsions of Crime,”
in Criminological Perspectives, J.
Muncie, E. McLaughlin, and M. Langan, eds., Sage. 1995; Le Droit de Tuer (French translation of chapter 2, Righteous
Slaughter), Actes de la Recherche en
Sciences Sociales, 120 (Décembre): 45-59. 1997. (Tr., M.-C. Rehm and L.
Wacquant). Foundations of Criminal Law,
L. Katz, M. S. Moore, and S.J. Morse, eds., Oxford. 1999; “Sneaky Thrills,” in About Criminals: a view of the offender’s
world. M. R. Pogrebin, ed. Sage. 2004; M. Kimmel and S. Messner, Men’s Lives, 2006; “Introduction,” in Cultural Criminology, Jeff Ferrell and
Keith Hayward, eds., in The Library of
Essays in Theoretical Criminology, Stuart Henry, gen. ed. Ashgate, 2011.
3.
How
Emotions Work. Chicago: University of Chicago. 1999.
4.
Neighborhood
Hollywood: Residential Community, Locally Shaped Biographies, and Cultural
Representation, 1870-2010. (in preparation)
ARTICLES
and CHAPTERS:
1.
Deviance, Charisma, and Rule-Defined Behavior. Social Problems, 20 (Fall): 186-202,
1972.
2.
Essences as Moral Identities: On Verifiability
and Responsib-ility in Imputations of Deviance and Charisma. American Journal of Sociology, 80 (May):
1369-1390, 1975.
3.
Cover-up and Collective Integrity. Social Problems, 25 (Fall): 1-25, 1977.
4.
Lawyers for the Poor in Transition. Law & Society Review, 12 (Winter):
275-300, 1978.
5.
Legality and Equality: Plea Bargaining in the
Prosecution of White-Collar and Common Crimes. Law & Society Review, 13 (Winter): 431-59, 1979.
6.
Concerted Ignorance: The Social Construction of
Cover-up. Urban Life, 8 (October):
295-316, 1979. [Also published as Concerted Ignorance: the Social Psychology of
Cover-up, in Management Fraud, R.K.
Elliott and J.J. Willingham, eds. New York: Petrocelli, 1980, pp. 149-170.]
7.
The Social Movement Against White-Collar Crime. Vol.II,
Criminology Review Yearbook. Egon
Bittner and Sheldon Messinger, eds. (Beverly Hills: Sage). pp. 161-184, 1980.
8.
A Theory of Qualitative Methodology: The Social
System of Analytic Fieldwork. Contemporary
Field Research. Robert Emerson, ed. (Prospect Heights, Ill.: Waveland). pp.
127-148. 1988 (c. 1983).
9.
Caste, Class and Counsel for the Poor. American Bar Foundation Research Journal,
1985 (Spring): 251-291, 1985.
10.
What Makes Crime “News”? Media, Culture & Society. 9 (January): 47-75, 1987. [reprinted
in John Muncie, ed., Criminology.
2005]
11.
The Motivation of the Persistent Robber. Michael
Tonry and Norval Morris, eds., vol. 14, Crime
and Justice. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. pp. 277-306. 1990. [reprinted
as chap. 15 in John E. Conklin, ed., Criminology
in the 1990s. Allyn & Bacon. 1996.]
12.
Criminals’ Passions and the Progressive’s
Dilemma. Alan Wolfe, ed., America at
Century’s End, Berkeley: University of California Press. pp. 396-417. 1991.
[reprinted as “Kiminalitetens lockelser och reformvännernas dilemma,” M.
Åkerström, Kriminalitet Kultur Kontroll.
Carlssons. 1996.]
13.
Jazz in Social Interaction: Personal Creativity,
Collective Constraint, and Motivational Explanation in the Social Thought of
Howard S. Becker. Symbolic Interaction.
17 (fall): 253-279, 1994.
14.
Families and Funny Mirrors: A Study of the
Social Construction and Personal Embodiment of Humor. American Journal of Sociology, 101 (March, 5): 1194-1237, 1996. [previously
available as Working Paper 3.18, Center
for German and European Studies. UC Berkeley. Nov. 1994.]
15.
Le Droit de Tuer (new Introductory section plus
translation of excerpts from Righteous Slaughter, chapter 2 in Seductions of Crime) Actes de la Recherche en Sciences Sociales,
120 (Décembre): 45-59. 1997. (Tr., M.-C. Rehm and L. Wacquant)
16.
The Social Psychology of Adam and Eve. Theory and Society, 25 (4, August):
545-582, 1996.
17.
Ethnography’s Warrants. Sociological Methods & Research, 25 (4, May): 391-423, 1997.
18.
The Elements of Shame. The Widening Scope of Shame. Melvin Lansky and Andrew Morrison,
eds. Hillsdale, N.J.: Analytic Press. pp.231-260. 1997.
19.
Hunting for Bias. Social Science, Social Policy and Law. Austin Sarat, Robert Kagan
and Patricia Ewing, eds., New York: Russell Sage. pp.210-257. 1999. [reprinted
in RBSE - Brazilian Journal of Sociology of the Emotion, v. 6, n. 18 of
December of 2007]
20.
The Gang Myth. Social Dynamics of Crime and Control: New Theories for a World in
Transition. Suzanne Karstedt and Kai-D. Bussmann, eds. Oxford, UK and
Portland, Oregon: Hart. Pp. 171-187. 2000.
21.
Analytic Induction. International Encyclopedia of the Social and Behavioral Sciences.
Neil J. Smelser and Paul B. Baltes, eds. Oxford, U.K.: Elsevier. Vol. 1, Pp.
480-484. 2001.
22.
From How to Why: on Luminous Description and
Causal Inference in Ethnography. Part 1. Ethnography.
2 (4): 443-473. 2001.
23.
From How to Why: on Luminous Description and
Causal Inference in Ethnography. Part 2. Ethnography.
3 (1): 63-90. 2002.
24.
Start Here: Social Ontology and Research
Strategy. Theoretical Criminology. 6
(3): 255-278. 2002.
25.
Metropolitan Crime Myths. In D. Halle, ed., New York and Los Angeles: Politics, Society
and Culture, Chicago: University of Chicago Press. Pp. 195-224. 2003.
26.
Phenomenological Ethnography in Sociology and
Anthropology. Ethnography. 4(3):
275-288. (With Thomas Csordas). 2003.
27.
Provocative Looks: Gang Appearance and Dress
Codes in an Inner-City Alternative School. Ethnography.
4(3): 421-454. (With Robert Garot). 2003.
28.
The Criminologists’ Gang. In C. Sumner, ed., Blackwell Companion to Criminology.
London: Blackwell. (With Curtis Jackson-Jacobs). Pp.91-124. 2004.
29.
On the Rhetoric and Politics of Ethnographic
Methodology. Annals of the American
Academy of Political and Social Science. 595 (September): 280-308. 2004.
30.
Everyday Lives and Extraordinary Research
Methods. Social Science Information.
43(4): 609-619. 2004.
31.
Commonsense Criteria. Workshop on Scientific Foundations of Qualitative Research, edited
by Charles C. Ragin, Joane Nagel, and Patricia White. Washington, D.C.: National
Science Foundation. Pp.83-90 2004.
32.
Ethical Escape Routes for Underground
Ethnographers. American Ethnologist.
33 (4, November): 499-506. 2006.
33.
Fourfold Tables v. Three Dimensional Realities:
Review Essay on Charles Tilly’s Why?.
Qualitative Sociology. 29 (4):
557-563. 2006.
34.
Forward to Market
Day in Provence. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. 2006. Pp. ix-xiii.
35.
Toward a Natural History of Ethical Censorship. Law & Society Review. 41 (4):
797-810. 2007.
36.
John Kitsuse: A Sociologist in Everyday Life. American Sociologist. 40:36–37. 2009.
37.
Time for New Urban Ethnographies. Ethnography. 10 (3): 1-20. 2010.
38.
Il Crogiolo dell’Emozione. Etnografia e Ricerca
Qualitativa. 3 (2, Maggio-Agosto): 165-190. 2010.
39.
Du Comment au Pourquoi. Description Lumineuse et
Inférence Causale en Ethnographie. Translation of “From How to Why, Parts I and
II,” L’engagement Ethnographique.
Paris: Editions de l’Ecole des Hautes Etudes. Daniel Cefaï, ed. 2010. Pp.
43-105.
40.
Se cuisiner un statut. Des noms aux verbes dans
l’étude de la stratification sociale. Numéro 23 – décembre, 2011. Ethnographiques.
http://www.ethnographiques.org/2011/ Katz - consulté le 11.01.2012.
41.
Cooks Cooking Up Recipes: The Cash Value of
Nouns, Verbs and Grammar. American
Sociologist. In press, expected 2012.
42.
Ethnography’s Expanding Warrants. Annals of the American Academy of Political
and Social Science. In press, expected 2012.
43.
Emotion’s Crucible. Emotion Matters. Pp.15-39. University of Toronto Press. In press,
expected 2012.
BOOK REVIEWS
1.
Rotenberg, Damnation and Deviance. American Journal of Sociology, 87
(Nov.): 735 - 738. 1981.
2.
Epstein, Women in Law. Work and Occupations, 11 (Nov.): 500 - 505. 1984.
3.
Segal, Blacks in the Law. Qualitative Sociology, 9 (spring): 85 -
88. 1985.
4.
Flood, Barrister’s Clerks. Contemporary Sociology, 15 (Jan.): 69 -
70. 1986.
5.
Abelson, When Ladies Go A –Thieving. New York Times Book Review, Feb. 18,
1990: 13.
6.
Wheeler, Mann and Sarat, Sitting in
Judgment. Contemporary Sociology, 19
(July): 584 - 586. 1990.
7.
Case, Down the Backstretch. American Journal of Sociology, 93 (4):
945 - 946. 1993.
8.
Granfield, Making Elite Lawyers. Journal of Contemporary Ethnography, 22
(April): 117 - 121. 1993.
9.
Wright and Decker, Burglars on the Job. Contemporary Sociology, 24 (November):
798 - 799. 1995.
10.
“Favorite Book” Appreciation of Andrew
Meltzoff’s work. Contemporary Sociology,
25 (July): 453. 1996.
11.
Ahearne, Michel de Certeau, Interpretation
and its Other. American Journal of
Sociology, (May): 1739 - 1741. 1997.
12.
Stoller, The Sensual Scholar. Contemporary Sociology, 27 (May): 270 -
271. 1998.
13.
Clark, Misery and Company. American Journal of Sociology, 104 (Sept):
587 - 589. 1998.
14.
Elster, Alchemies of the Mind . American Journal of Sociology, 106
(July): 259 - 262. 2000.
15.
Shields, Speaking from the Heart. Contemporary Sociology, 33 (January): 50
- 51. 2004.
16.
Ferrell, Empire of Scrounge. Contemporary Sociology, 36 (1): 70 - 71.
2007.
17.
Becker, Telling about Society. British Journal of Sociology, 58 (4):807
- 808. 2008.
18.
Sánchez - Jankowski, Cracks in the
Pavement. American Journal of Sociology.
115(6, May ): 1950 - 1952. 2010
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