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Yulia Gogol
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Deva Woodley
Deva Woodly (Ph.D., University of Chicago) is Assistant Professor of Politics at the New School for Social Research. Deva was awarded a Research Fellowship at the Institute for Advanced Study at Princeton, she was the Friends of the Institute member there, and was honored to deliver the Association of Members of the Institute public lecture after her research term ended. She has also served as a facilitator and consultant at the Project on Civic Reflection and as a board member for Free Spirit Media. Her research draws from political science, economics, sociology and anthropology as it focuses on how people articulate their own situations in the world, how these discourses circulate online, and what political effects they have. She has tracked how Movements since the late 20th century have used blogs and social media to create spaces for framing messages to the wider world, spurring individuals to action. Her book The Politics of Common Sense: How Social Movements Use Public Discourse to Change Politics and Win Acceptance (Oxford University Press, 2015) focuses on bottom-up political change in the living wage and marriage equality movements, as it “theorizes the messy, contested terrain of discourse as a vital site of political activity” (Theory & Event). Updated February 2017
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Results
-
Yulia Gogol
-
Dmytro Chybisov
-
Kimberly Ang
-
Olivia Andrzejczak
-
Anna Terwell
-
Martin Penner
-
Bryan Norrington
-
Loren Stillman
-
Andy Milne
-
Deva Woodley
Deva Woodly (Ph.D., University of Chicago) is Assistant Professor of Politics at the New School for Social Research. Deva was awarded a Research Fellowship at the Institute for Advanced Study at Princeton, she was the Friends of the Institute member there, and was honored to deliver the Association of Members of the Institute public lecture after her research term ended. She has also served as a facilitator and consultant at the Project on Civic Reflection and as a board member for Free Spirit Media. Her research draws from political science, economics, sociology and anthropology as it focuses on how people articulate their own situations in the world, how these discourses circulate online, and what political effects they have. She has tracked how Movements since the late 20th century have used blogs and social media to create spaces for framing messages to the wider world, spurring individuals to action. Her book The Politics of Common Sense: How Social Movements Use Public Discourse to Change Politics and Win Acceptance (Oxford University Press, 2015) focuses on bottom-up political change in the living wage and marriage equality movements, as it “theorizes the messy, contested terrain of discourse as a vital site of political activity” (Theory & Event). Updated February 2017