Joe Parker, Professor of Critical Global Studies

Joseph Parker

Professor Emeritus of Critical Global Studies

With Pitzer Since: 1989
Field Group: Critical Global Studies (formerly International and Intercultural Studies)
Campus Address: Broad Hall 212
Phone: 909.607.4318
Email: [email protected]
@democracy2come

Educational Background

MA, PhD, Harvard University
BA, Occidental College

Additional Information

Curriculum Vitae

Personal Website

Democracies2Come Blog

Selected Writings

“California Native Plant Sustainable Gardening, Part 1 (Feb, 2022) and Part 2 (Aug, 2022)” 

Democracy Beyond the Modern State: Equality in Practice. Routledge, April, 2017.

“How to Be an Ally to Indigenous Peoples” (co-authored). Seventh Generation Fund for Indigenous Peoples, 2017.

“Questioning Appropriation: Agency and Complicity in a Transnational Feminist Politics.” Journal of Feminist Scholarship 3 (Fall, 2012).

An Ethico-Politics of Subaltern Representations in Post-9/11 Documentary Film co-authored with Rebekah Sinclair, in Screens of Terror: Representations of War and Terrorism in Film and Television Since 9/11. Ed. Philip Hammond. Suffolk: Arima Publishing, 2011. 213-31.

“The Ethico-politics of Dedisciplinary Practices,” in Interdisciplinarity and Social Justice, ed. Ranu Samantrai, Joe Parker, and Mary Romero Albany, NY: State University of New York Press, 2010.

“Introduction: Interdisciplinarity and Social Justice,” co-author with Ranu Samantrai. In Interdisciplinarity and Social Justice, ed. Ranu Samantrai, Joe Parker, and Mary Romero Albany, NY: State University of New York Press, 2010.

“Subjugated Knowledges and Dedisciplinarity in Cultural Studies Pedagogy.” In Writing Against the Curriculum: Antidisciplinarity in the Writing and Cultural Studies Classroom. Ed. Ryan Claycomb and Randi Kristensen. Cultural Studies/Pedagogy/Activism. New York: Lexington Books, 2009. 35-56.

“Dreaming Gender: Kyogoku School Japanese Women Poets (Re)Writing the Feminine Subject.” Tulsa Studies in Women’s Literature. 27.2 (Fall,2008):259-90.

“The Racial and Colonial Politics of the Modern Object of Knowledge: Cautionary Notes on ‘Scripture.'” Theorizing Scriptures: New Critical Orientations to a Cultural Phenomenon, ed. Vincent Wimbush, Signifying (On) Scriptures 1, Rutgers University Press, 2008, 268-77.

Page last updated on December 4, 2023