Ara A. Francis

Francis

Sociology and Anthropology Department
 

Associate Professor
Gender, Sexuality, and Women's Studies Studies
Ph.D., University of California, Davis

 

Fields: micro sociology; deviance and social disruption; death and dying; families; qualitative methods

CV (PDF) 禄      

Email: afrancis@holycross.edu
Office Phone: 508-793-2487
Office: Beaven 211
PO Box: 50A
 

 

I joined the 海角社区 faculty in 2009 after receiving my Ph.D. in sociology from the University of California, Davis. A Colorado native, I earned my bachelor鈥檚 degree from the University of Colorado in Boulder. I am a micro sociologist, which is to say that I study the smaller units of social life such as selves, emotions, interactions, and relationships. My research focuses broadly on the social dimensions of personal hardship and what people do in the wake of difficult or unexpected circumstances. I am particularly interested in the relationship between social disruption and a sense of belonging, the stigma of personal misfortune, and how people make sense of their own troubles.

I explore these themes in , a book drawn from interviews with 55 parents whose children face challenges ranging from learning disabilities to substance addictions. When children struggle, I find, they turn parents鈥 lives upside down, disrupting their daily routines, relationships, and identities. Mothers鈥 and fathers鈥 anxiety, grief, guilt, and loneliness, I argue, highlight the extent to which middle-class visions of the good life are contingent upon raising 鈥減roblem-free鈥 children.

My recent work explores the contemporary death-positive movement and the emerging occupations of end-of-life doula care and death midwifery.

Courses:

SOCL 101: The Sociological Perspective
SOCL 219: Deviance, Normalcy, & Social Control
SOCL 256: Self & Society

SOCL 375: Sociology of End-of-Life Care
MONT 100: Death & Society

Selected Publications

2022. 鈥淕ender and Legitimacy in Personal Service Occupations: The Case of End-of-Life Doulas and Death Midwives.鈥 Journal of Contemporary Ethnography.

        Blog Post: 
         Work in Progress: Sociology on the Economy, Work and Inequality.

 2022. 鈥淪ocial Constructionism in the Symbolic Interactionist Tradition鈥 in Wayne Brekhus, Thomas DeGloma, and William Force (eds.) The Oxford Handbook of Symbolic Interaction. New York, NY: Oxford University Press.

2019. 鈥淓pilogue鈥 Pp. 83-99 in The Craft of Dying: The Modern Face of Death (Anniversary Edition), by Lyn H. Lofland. Cambridge, MA: The MIT Press.

2015. Family Trouble: Middle-Class Parents, Children鈥檚 Problems, and the Disruption of Everyday Life. New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers University Press.

2015. 鈥淗urricane Katrina, Parenting Trouble, and the Politics of Suffering鈥 with D. Harvey in R. Anderson (ed.) World Suffering Book. New York: Springer, 401-411.

2013. 鈥淥n (Not) Practicing What We Preach鈥 with J. Bakehorn, Pedagogies Essay, Contexts, 12 (4): 80-83.

2013. 鈥淣ormal Problems or Problem Children? Parents and the Micro-Politics of Deviance and Disability鈥 in J.R. McCarthy, C. Hooper, and V. Gillies (eds.) Family Troubles? Exploring Changes and Challenges in the Family Lives of Children and Young People. Bristol, UK: The Policy Press.

2013. 鈥淔amily Trouble, Methods Trouble: Qualitative Research and the Methodological Divide鈥 in J.R. McCarthy, C. Hooper, and V. Gillies (eds.) Family Troubles? Exploring Changes and Challenges in the Family Lives of Children and Young People. Bristol, UK: The Policy Press.

2012. 鈥淭he Dynamics of Family Trouble: Middle-Class Parents Whose Children Have Problems.鈥 Journal of Contemporary Ethnography 41 (4): 371-401.

2012. 鈥淪tigma in an Era of Anxious Parenting and Medicalisation: How Proximity and Culpability Shape Middle-Class Parents鈥 Experiences of Disgrace.鈥 Sociology of Health and Illness 34 (6): 927-942.

2010. 鈥淟osing the 鈥楴ormal鈥 Child: Ramifications for Middle-Class Mothers.鈥 Journal of the Motherhood Initiative 1 (2): 68-83.