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DTSTART:20251102T020000
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DTSTART:20260308T020000
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UID:calendar.4189.events_uoft_date.0@www.sociology.utoronto.ca
CREATED:20251203T201510Z
DESCRIPTION:\nWhen and Where: \nFriday, March 27, 2026 2:00 pm to 4:00 pm
  \n Main Auditorium, Mezzanine Floor \n 700 University Avenue \n\nSpeaker
 s \nDr. Michèle Lamont (Harvard University) \n\nDescription: \n REGISTER H
 ERE: S. D.  Clark Lecture 2026 | Event Registration Form In this lecture,
  Michèle Lamont will discuss cultural processes such as recognition and st
 igmatization through an analysis of recent political developments in the U
 nited States. After revisiting her book “Seeing Others: How Recognition Wo
 rks and How it Can Heal a Divided World, she explores how young American\
 , British and Finnish workers seek recognition through politics, and how 
 indigenous people in Eastern Canada and Micronesia are seeking recognition
  through environmental justice and jobs. These paired case studies will fi
 gure in a book in progress, tentatively titled Recognition Globally.Michè
 le Lamont is Professor of Sociology and of African and African American St
 udies and the Robert I. Goldman Professor of European Studies at Harvard U
 niversity. Born in 1957, she grew up in Quebec and studied political theo
 ry at the University of Ottawa before obtaining a doctorate in sociology a
 t the University of Paris in 1983. After completing post-doctoral research
  at Stanford University, she has served on the faculty at the University 
 of Texas at Austin (1985-87), Princeton University (1987-2002) and Harvar
 d University (2003-present).A cultural and comparative sociologist who stu
 dies inclusion and inequality, she has researched how we evaluate social 
 worth across societies, the role of cultural processes in fostering inequ
 ality, symbolic and social boundaries, and the evaluation of knowledge,
  as well as topics such as dignity, stigma, racism, class cultures, co
 llective well-being, social resilience, and social change. Her books inc
 lude Money, Morals and Manners: the Culture of the French and the America
 n Upper-Middle Class (1992), The Dignity of Working Men: Morality and the
  Boundaries of Race, Class, and Immigration(2000), How Professors Think
 : Inside the Curious World of Academic Judgement (2009), Getting Respect:
  Responding to Stigma and Discrimination in the Us, Brazil and Israel(coa
 uthored, 2016), and Seeing Others: How Recognition Works and How It Can 
 Heal a Divided World (2023). She is also the author of several collective 
 works and over a hundred articles published in American Sociological Revie
 w, American Journal of Sociology, A\nual Review of Sociology, Human Nat
 ure Behavior, and other prominent outlets.  She served as the 108th presi
 dent of the American Sociological Association in 2016-17.  She is an elect
 ed member of the American Academy of Arts and Science, the American Philo
 sophical Society, the Royal Society of Canada, and the British Academy. 
 Honors include a Guggenheim Fellowship, Carnegie Fellowship, Leverhulme 
 Fellowship, the 2014 Gutenberg award, the 2017 Erasmus Prize, the 2024 
 Kohli Prize for Sociology, and honorary doctorates from six countries. Re
 ception to follow from 4:00–5:00pm at the Department of Sociology, 17th F
 loor, 700 University Avenue. Drinks and light refreshments will be served
 . \n\nContact Information: \n Blair Wheaton blair.wheaton@utoronto.ca \n70
 0 University Avenue \n\nCategories \n Lectures \n\nAudiences \n Alumni and
  FriendsCommunityFacultyGraduate Students
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20260327T140000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20260327T160000
LAST-MODIFIED:20260319T201520Z
LOCATION:700 University Avenue
SUMMARY:2026 S.D. Clark Lecture | Trump’s Great Symbolic Reshuffling and Be
 yond: Recognition, Stigmatization and Cultural Processes
URL;TYPE=URI:https://www.sociology.utoronto.ca/events/2026-sd-clark-lecture
 -trump%E2%80%99s-great-symbolic-reshuffling-and-beyond-recognition
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