Department of SociologyBannerBanner
HomeUndergraduateGraduateFacultyCurrent EventsContact Us
 

Nicola Beisel

 

Associate Professor
Department of Sociology American Studies

Areas of Interest: Cultural Sociology, Sex and Gender, Historical Sociology

 

Curriculum Vitae
Contact
Relevant Links
Courses
Publications

Associate Professor of Sociology and Gender Studies, studies the relationship between moral politics and the reproduction of children. Her first book, Imperiled Innocents: Anthony Comstock and Family Reproduction in Victorian America (Princeton, 1997), examined the career of Anthony Comstock and his wealthy supporters in the New York Society for the Suppression of Vice. Comstock authored the nineteenth-century laws banning the distribution of "obscene" materials, including information about birth control and abortion. Beisel is currently working on a book entitled Aborting Race: Color Blindness in the American Abortion Debate. Her paper "Abortion, Race and Gender in Nineteenth Century America," which was co-authored with former Gender Studies major Tamara Kay, appeared in the American Sociological Review in 2004. The paper was awarded "Best Recent Article" prizes by the Political Sociology section and the Race, Class and Gender section of the American Sociological Association. Prof. Beisel has been the recipient of fellowships from the John Simon Guggenheim Foundation and the National Humanities Center, and was named Charles Deering McCormick Professor of Teaching Excellence in 2000.

Contact Top

1810 Chicago Av Room 223
Evanston, Illinois 60208-1330
Phone: (847) 467-1250
Fax: (847) 491-9907

(American Studies)
University Hall Room 20
Evanston, Illinois 60208-1330
Office Hours: Wednesday 1:00-2:00 and By Appointment

Relevant Links Top

Center for Law, Culture, and Social Thought

Courses Top

Current Courses: Fall Quarter 2008  

 

 

Courses Taught  
Soc 216-0 Sec. 20: Sociology of Gender (Fall 2007) Syllabus
Soc 216-0 Sec. 20 (Winter 2006 and 2007):
Sociology of Gender
Syllabus
Soc 476- Sec.20: Special Topics (Winter 2006):
Race and Reproduction
Syllabus

Soc 476 Special Topics (Spring 2007): Social Movements

Syllabus
Soc 216-0 Sec. 20 (Fall 2005):
Sociology of Gender
Syllabus

 


Back to Faculty Main Page

Northwestern logo     WCAS logo