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Carol B. Stack (born 1940) is an Urban American anthropologist who specialized in studies of African American networks, minority women, and youth. Stack has taken a strong role in several social sciences, and is Professor Emerita of Education in the Graduate School of Education at
University of California, Berkeley The University of California, Berkeley (UC Berkeley, Berkeley, Cal, or California) is a public land-grant research university in Berkeley, California. Established in 1868 as the University of California, it is the state's first land-grant u ...
. She taught at
Boston University Boston University (BU) is a private research university in Boston, Massachusetts. The university is nonsectarian, but has a historical affiliation with the United Methodist Church. It was founded in 1839 by Methodists with its original campu ...
and
Duke University Duke University is a private research university in Durham, North Carolina. Founded by Methodists and Quakers in the present-day city of Trinity in 1838, the school moved to Durham in 1892. In 1924, tobacco and electric power industrialist James ...
before becoming Professor of Social and Cultural Studies in Education at Berkeley. She is the author of ''All Our Kin: Strategies for Survival in a Black Community'' and ''Call To Home: African Americans Reclaim the Rural South''.


Education

Stack received her Masters in 1968 and her PhD in anthropology in 1972.


Accomplishments and awards

Carol B. Stack was awarded the Prize for Critical Research in 1995 from the Society for the Anthropology of North America. She has also received many fellowships such as the Guggenheim, Rockefeller, and Russel Sage Fellowships.


Publications

*''All Our Kin: Strategies for Survival in a Black Community'' (1974, Harper and Row: ; latest reissue 2003, Basic Books: ) *''Call To Home: African-Americans Reclaim The Rural South'' (1996, Basic Books: ; latest reissue 2003: )


''All Our Kin:Strategies for Survival in a Black Community''

Carol Stack's ''All Our Kin'' is a classic ethnography from the early 1970s. Her 1974 book ''All Our Kin'' has been described as "a classic of urban sociology", "one of the earliest and most popular accounts of how lack kinshipall works" and "influential". All Our Kin is the chronicle of a young white woman's sojourn into The Flats, an African-American ghetto community, to study the support system family and friends form when coping with poverty. The Book tore down stereotypes and opened the way for research on families and social structure in American communities. The book portrays of the social networks and value systems that evolved within African-American communities to combat grinding poverty. In communities plagued by single-parent families and joblessness, the book chronicles intense loyalties and an intricate trading system that ensures survival. ''All Our Kin'' challenges white America to reevaluate its notion of family''.''


''Call To Home: African Americans Reclaim the Rural South''

''Call To Home: African Americans Reclaim the Rural South'' is a poignant saga of a reverse exodus: the return of half a million black Americans to the rural South.There have been many books focusing on the black migration out of the South into Northern cities. But few people are aware that over the past 20 years the trend has been in the other direction, with African-Americans moving back south, to some of the least promising places in all of America—places the Department of Agriculture calls “Persistent Poverty Counties.” Carol Stack brings their stories to life in this captivating book. Interweaving a powerful human story with a larger economic and social analysis of migration, poverty, and the urban underclass, ''Call to Home'' offers a rare glimpse of African-American families pulling together and trying to make it in today's America.


References

{{DEFAULTSORT:Stack, Carol 1940 births Living people American women anthropologists Boston University faculty Duke University faculty University of California, Berkeley Graduate School of Education faculty American women sociologists American sociologists 21st-century American women