Peggy Levitt


Peggy Levitt is an American sociologist and professor. She is the Mildred Lane Kemper Chair of Sociology at Wellesley College and a co-founder of the Global Centre. Her latest book, Transnational Social Protection: Social Welfare Across National Borders was published by Oxford University Press in 2023. Her current book project, Move Over, Mona Lisa. Move Over, Jane Eyre: Making the World's Universities, Museums, and Libraries More Welcoming to Everyone will be published by Stanford University Press. Levitt writes regularly about globalization, arts and culture, immigration, and religion.

Biography

Peggy co-directed the Transnational Studies Initiative and the Politics and Social Change Workshop at the Weatherhead Center for International Affairs at Harvard University from 1998-2020. She received Honorary Doctoral Degrees from the University of Helsinki and from Maastricht University.  She has held numerous fellowships and guest professorships including, most recently, a writing fellowship at the Rockefeller Center in Bellagio, Italy ; The Institute for Advanced Studies at the University of Bologna ; The Institute for Human Sciences in Vienna ; The Institute for the Advanced Study of the Humanities at the University of Edinburgh ;  The Institut Convergences Migration in Paris ; The European University Institute and at The Baptist University of Hong Kong.
Her earlier books include Artifacts and Allegiances: How Museums Put the Nation and the World on Display, Religion on the Edge, God Needs No Passport, The Transnational Studies Reader, The Changing Face of Home, and The Transnational Villagers''.

Selected Recent Books and Publications

Books

Recent Edited Collections

2020

Scale Shifting: New Insights into Global Literary Circulation Editor of special volume of Journal of World Literature.Cultural Policies in Global South Cities Editor of special volume of International Journal of Cultural Policy.

Articles

2023

  • "Decolonizing Decoloniality: Decentering Art History and Comparative Literature Classrooms Outside Europe and the United States", Comparative Education Review 67
  • "Cultures of Cultural Globalization: How National Repertoires and Political Ideologies Affect Literary and Artistic Circulation" ''Cultural Sociology''

2022

  • "Producing Korean Literature for Export.", Chinese Journal of Sociology, 9: 1-25
  • "Cuán "cosmopolita" es la formación en Literatura Comparada? El Caso de Argentina, Latin American Research Review, 57:278-297.
  • "Getting From Buenos Aires to Mexico City Without Passing Through Madrid: Latin American Publishing Topographies". Journal of Latin American Cultural Studies, 2022.

2021

2020

  • "Cultural Policies in Cities in the Global South: A multi-scalar approach." International Journal of Cultural Policy, Vol 26: 711-720
  • "Scale Shifting: New Insights into Global Literary Circulation: Introduction" Journal of World Literature Vol 5: 467-480
  • "Who's on the Syllabus? World Literature According to the US Pedagogical Canon" Journal of World Literature 5: 588-611.
  • "Imaging the Globe: Remapping the World Through Public Diplomacy at the Asia Society." International Journal of Politics, Culture, and Society
  • "Explaining Variations in Scale-Shifting: The Role of Spatiality, Topography, and Infrastructure in Global Literary Fields. ''Poetics''

2019

  • "Beyond the West: Barriers to Globalizing Art History" Art History Pedagogy and Practice, Vol 4: 1-24.

Selected Book Chapters

2020

2019

  • "Words that Make Worlds." In Ruth Erickson and Eva Respini, When Home Won't Let You Stay: Migration Through Contemporary Art, Boston, Mass: Institute of Contemporary Art/Yale University Press, pp. 212–219.

2018

  • "Creating National and Global Citizens: What Role Can Museums Play?" In Pieter Bevelander and Christina Johansson, Museums in Times of Migration and Mobilities, Lund, Sweden: Nordic Academic Press.
  • "Creating Successful Diverse Cities: What Role Can Cultural Institutions Play." In Tiziana Caponio, Peter Scholten, and Ricard Zapta Barrero, Cities of Migration, New York and London: Routledge Press.

Opinion pieces

  • The Huffington Post, June 11, 2007, "Transnational Problems Need Transnational Solutions"
  • The Huffington Post, June 6, 2007, "Dios Ha Muerto?"
  • The Boston Globe, May 27, 2007, "Life, Liberty, and the Folks Back Home"
  • The Boston Globe, May 27, 2007, "The Global in the Local"
  • The Huffington Post, May 18, 2007, "Religion Isn't One-Size-Fits-All"
  • Seattle Post Intelligencer, May 15, 2007, "'Us vs. them' mentality holds us back"
  • The New York Times, May 6, 2007, "A Good Provider is One Who Leaves"