Seattle U

Rachel E. Luft, PhD — Faculty ; Associate Professor ; Department of Anthropology and Sociology - Honors - Women, Gender and Sexuality Studies Program , College of Arts & Sciences .

Associate Professor, Sociology

Biography

Dr. Rachel E. Luft is Associate Professor of Sociology at Seattle University with affiliation in Women, Gender, and Sexuality Studies. An activist-scholar, her primary areas of research specialization are race, gender, intersectionality, social movements, and the utopian imaginary. Her current project, supported by the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, explores the role of politicized healing and transformative practice in social movements for racial and gender justice.

For years following Hurricane Katrina, which struck while she was teaching at the University of New Orleans, Professor Luft was a participant observer in grassroots social movement responses to the crisis. Her research explores what she calls racialized disaster patriarchy—a complement to Naomi Klein’s notion of disaster capitalism—which describes the intersectional dimensions of disaster and disaster movement organizing. Publications on racialized disaster patriarchy can be found in Feminist Formations, American Quarterly, The National Women’s Studies Association Journal, and a series of book chapters in edited volumes. Other publications examine the relationship between economic justice and Indigenous sovereignty against the backdrop of disaster, the domestication of human rights frameworks in racial justice movements, and women’s intersectional organizing.

Professor Luft teaches courses on race, gender, feminist methodologies, the sociological imagination, and social movements. Her current teaching passion is an experimental course, “The Utopian Imaginary: Freedom Dreams,” which explores radical futures by drawing on historical social movements, visionary fictions, and alternative economies, with an emphasis on abolition, transformative justice, and feminist praxis. In 2019 Professor Luft received Seattle University’s Faculty of the Year Award and the College of Arts and Sciences Outstanding Service Award.

Publications