April 21, 2016 | ||
7:00 pm | to | 8:30 pm |
Ford Alumni Center
Giustina Ballroom
1720 E. 13th Ave.
UO campus
PDF flyer
College professor Elizabeth A. Armstrong spent five years inhabiting a dorm room on the Indiana University campus while studying the party culture that dominates student social life. In a public lecture titled “Sex, Alcohol, and Violence: How Status Competition Creates Risk,” Dr. Armstrong will talk about what she learned at 7 p.m., Thursday April 21, at the Ford Alumni Center’s Giustina Ballroom, 1720 E. 13th Ave., on the University of Oregon campus.
Armstrong, the coauthor of Paying for the Party: How College Maintains Inequality (Harvard University Press, 2013), is a sociologist with research interests in the areas of sexuality, gender, culture, organizations, social movements, and higher education. She joined the Department of Sociology and the Organizational Studies Program at the University of Michigan in 2009. Before that, she held a faculty appointment in the Department of Sociology at Indiana University. She was a fellow at the Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study at Harvard University and a recipient of a National Academy of Education/Spencer Postdoctoral Fellowship. She earned her M.A. and Ph.D. degrees in Sociology at the University of California-Berkeley and a B.A. in Sociology and Computer Science from the University of Michigan.
This event is being sponsored by the UO Center for the Study of Women in Society, UO Departments of Sociology and Women’s and Gender Studies, the Division of Student Life, and Fraternity and Sorority Life.
New York Times interview with Elizabeth Armstrong: http://www.nytimes.com/2013/08/04/education/edlife/elizabeth-a-armstrong-on-her-book-paying-for-the-party.html?_r=0
Comments from publisher on Paying for the Party
- In an era of skyrocketing tuition and mounting concern over whether
college is “worth it,” Paying for the Party is an indispensable
contribution to the dialogue assessing the state of American higher
education. A powerful exposé of unmet obligations and misplaced
priorities, it explains in vivid detail why so many leave college with so
little to show for it. - “With astute observations and insights, Paying for the Party sheds
new light on the lived experiences of contemporary students. It is
a very important piece of scholarship that will inform the national
discourse on the current state of U. S. higher education.”
—Richard Arum, author of Academically Adrift - “By focusing on the lives of young women who spent freshman year
living on a ‘party floor,’ Armstrong and Hamilton help us understand
critical issues facing American higher education, including the outsized
role of sororities and fraternities and how the values of affluent
students coincide with the interests of universities to empower the
‘party pathway.’ Richly observed and vividly narrated, this is an
important ethnography of American campus life.”
—Steven Brint, University of California, Riverside