Paul Roger Lichterman![]() Professor of Sociology and Religion, University of Southern California Resident at the Forschungskolleg Humanwissenschaften: May–July 2019, June–July 2023; June–July 2024; May–November 2025 Research topic at the Forschungskolleg Humanwissenschaften: »The Moral and Political Projects of White Anti-Racism in the U.S.« Project outline: I am beginning a book based on ethnographic and interview research that illuminates how white people challenge systemic, anti-Black racism. What cultural meanings and methods of relationship-building make this effort possible in the US? For many participants, white anti-racism is primarily a moral project that involves participants in arduous kinds of self-cultivation, sometimes pursued in special trainings in activist settings or workplaces. Others challenge systemic racism through collective action to reform institutions that perpetuate racialized social inequities. Both modes engage political and ethical action to widely varying degree and in different ways. Informed by moral anthropology and sociolinguistics as well as political and cultural sociology, the study will build out the notion of »moral projects« of anti-racism, examining their personal dimensions, public presence and power. (Paul Roger Lichterman) Research partner: Paul Lichterman works with Ferdinand Sutterlüty, Professor of Sociology at Goethe University. In 2019, his stay at the Kolleg was funded by the LOEWE focus area »Religious Positioning. Modalities and Constellations in Jewish, Christian and Islamic Contexts«, and in 2023 by the research project »Moral Underground. Hidden Practices of Resistance«, which is based at the Institute of Sociology at Goethe University. In 2024-25 his research on white anti-racism is funded by the Alexander von Humboldt Foundation.
Scholarly profile of Paul Roger LichtermanPaul Lichterman is Professor of Sociology and Religion at the University of Southern California. His research inquires into how civic actors define public issues and organize collective action to address them in a socially unequal, culturally diverse society. He has received awards from the cultural sociology and political sociology sections of the ASA for his work in American Journal of Sociology and Theory and Society. His book Elusive Togetherness won the Distinguished Book Award from the Society for the Scientific Study of Religion and the Distinguished Scholarship Award from the Pacific Sociological Association. In November 2023, he received the Humboldt Research Award on the proposal of Ferdinand Sutterlüty.Website: More information about Paul Lichterman can be found here. Main areas of research: Culture, religion, civil society organisations and social movements, political sociology, qualitative methodology and theory.Selected publications:
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