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Eric Selbin is a political sociologist whose primary research interests are revolutions and related forms of collective behavior (resistance, rebellion, social movements) as well as international relations theory. Much of his work has focused on Latin America and the Caribbean, and his volume on modern Latin American revolutions is frequently used as a textbook in courses in Latin American studies and contentious politics.[citation needed] He holds a PhD from the University of Minnesota and is professor of political science at Southwestern University in Georgetown, Texas, where he has also been appointed a university scholar. In 2013, Selbin was appointed a research fellow at the Teresa Lozano Long Institute of Latin American Studies at the University of Texas at Austin and he has held appointments at Sweden’s Umeå University (2003-2006) and at the Tallinn Postgraduate Summer School in Social and Cultural Studies (2012). In 2014, he was appointed to the Lucy King Brown chair, one of six endowed Brown chairs at Southwestern University.[2]
Eric Selbin | |
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Academic background | |
Alma mater | University of Minnesota |
Academic work | |
School or tradition | International relations |
Institutions | Southwestern University |
Main interests | Resistance, rebellion, social movements, international relations theory |
Notable works | Revolution, Rebellion, Resistance: The Power of Story |
Notable ideas | Revolutionary Stories [1] |
Selbin's most well-known work[according to whom?] is Revolution, Rebellion, Resistance: The Power of Story (2010), which puts forth four different types of "revolutionary story" that have accompanied revolutionary struggles from the French Revolution to the present day: civilizing and democratizing, the social revolution, freedom and liberation, and the lost and forgotten. For Selbin, these narratives, conducted across time and space through processes of myth, memory and mimesis, are the crucible of revolutionary action.[3]
Selbin has also collaborated on topics related to homeschooling and feminism with Helen Cordes, the writer and editor to whom he is married, and their two daughters.[clarification needed]
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