UMass Boston

Cinzia Solari, Grad Prog Dir/Assoc Professor , Sociology

Cinzia Solari

Department:
Sociology
Title:
Graduate Program Director/Associate Professor
Location:
Wheatley Hall Floor 04

Biography

Cinzia D. Solari (pronounce) is Associate Professor of Sociology at UMass Boston. She is a feminist ethnographer whose work has focused on post-Soviet peoples as they make their way in a capitalist world. Dr. Solari has used the tools of global ethnography to investigate the intersections of migration, modernity, and neoliberal capitalism. Recent investigations into how pro and anti-LGBTQ+ rhetoric is deployed by nation-states in the international area have led to her current research which focuses on nonbinary and transgender youth. She is a first-generation scholar.

Area of Expertise

Feminist intersectional theory; migration; transnational nation-state building; post-Soviet transformation; neoliberal capitalism; global ethnography; nonbinary and transgender kids.

Regional expertise: Ukraine and the former Soviet Union; Europe

Degrees

PhD, University of California, Berkeley

BA, Brown University

Professional Publications & Contributions

Books

Peer-reviewed Articles and Essays (selected)

Additional Information

Dr. Solari's most recent book with Smitha Radhakrishnan, The Gender Order of Neoliberalism (Polity Press 2023) is winner of the 2024 Immanuel Wallerstein Book Award, Political Economy of the World System Section (PEWS) of the American Sociological Association (ASA). The book argues that our Western understandings of neoliberalism do not travel well because we have only acknowledged one of neoliberalism's pre-histories, liberalism, and we must recover socialism and post-colonialism which also shaped the transnational networks that "cooked up" neoliberalism and our current world order. Placing three world regions in conversation—the US, the former Soviet Union, and South and Southeast Asia—reveals that gender is foundational to making the neoliberal global order work. The erasure of collective transnational organizing, and particularly the erasure of the Soviet Union from our collective knowledge, has made it seem there is nothing outside neoliberalism. The authors show that templates for feminist imaginings of an anti-capitalist, anti-racist world already exist and must be recovered to create a fairer future.

Dr. Solari's first book, On the Shoulders of Grandmothers: Gender, Migration, and Post-Soviet Nation-State Building, won the 2020 Mirra Komavrsky Book Award from the Eastern Sociological Society (ESS). Through in-depth interviews and ethnographic work with migrant grandmothers caring for the elderly in Italy and California and their adult children in Ukraine, On the Shoulders of Grandmothers investigates how migrant grandmothers built the "new" Ukraine from the outside in through transnational networks. By comparing the experiences of individual migrants in two different migration patterns—one a post-Soviet "exile" of individual women to Italy and the other an "exodus" of families to the United States—Dr. Solari exposes the production of new gendered capitalist economics and nationalisms that precariously place Ukraine between Europe and Russia with implications for the global world order. This global ethnography illuminates the larger context of Russia's invasion of Ukraine in February 2022.

View Professor Solari's Curriculum Vitae

Go to Professor Solari's website

Follow Professor Solari on Twitter: @CinziaDSolari and #ShouldersOfGrandmothers #GenderOrderOfNeoliberalism