Carol B. Stack | |
---|---|
Education | Anthropology |
Occupation | Anthropologist/Writer |
Notable work | All Our Kin, Call to Home |
Awards | Prize for Critical Research in 1995, Guggenheim Fellowship, Rockefeller Fellowship, and Russel Sage Fellowships |
Carol B. Stack (born 1940)[1] 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.[2][3]
She taught at Boston University and Duke University before becoming Professor of Social and Cultural Studies in Education at Berkeley.[4]
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.