Jonathan Wynn
Professor and Department Chair
Personal Webpage, The City and the Hospital: The Paradox of Medically Overserved Communities, Music/City: American Festivals and Placemaking in Austin, Nashville, and Newport, The Tour Guide: Walking and Talking New York
Office Hours for Spring 2024
In person: Wednesdays 9-11, 1:15-3; Thursdays 9-12, and by appointment
Via Zoom: Mondays 9-2.
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About
Jonathan Wynn studies urban culture.
He wrote The Tour Guide: Walking and Talking New York (2011), Music/City: American Festivals and Placemaking in Austin, Nashville, and Newport (2015), and The City and the Hospital: The paradox of medically overserved communities (2023), all with the University of Chicago Press. In addition to articles published in City & Community, Qualitative Sociology, Media, Culture and Society, Sociological Forum, Cultural Sociology, and Contexts Magazine, two of his articles are “Hobo to Doormen: The Characters of Qualitative Analysis, Past and Present” (in Ethnography), and "On the Sociology of Occasions" (in Sociological Theory). Pieces of public sociology have been placed in The Guardian, The Conversation, and The Washington Post.
The City & the Hospital (first authored with Daniel Skinner, and co-written with Berkeley Franz) focuses on a central puzzle: Why are a city’s worst health outcomes often found in the neighborhoods directly around prestigious hospitals? As large hospitals tower over urban neighborhoods and health policy pushes non-profit hospitals to do more to support local communities, we find a surprisingly complex story of two interlocking systems: disadvantaged urban communities and high tech health care facilities. The book takes a closer look at the intertwined fates of these systems in three cities: Aurora, CO; Cleveland, OH; and Hartford, CT.
Since 2011 Wynn has been a regular contributor to the Everyday Sociology blog, and is a contributor to the UMass Prison Education Initiative. He is also working on an Urban Culture primer (co-authored with Andrew Deener) that is under contract with Oxford University Press, and is a contributor to the direct-to-student introductory textbook, A Sociology Experiment.
Listen to an interview on BBC Radio on The Tour Guide. Listen to "Death to Concrete Culture" on WGBH Boston/PRI's Innovation Hub, The Academic Minute and the Australian Broadcasting Company's Future Tense for discussions of Music/City.
Education
PhD, The Graduate Center, CUNY, 2006
Research Areas
Urban and Cultural Sociology, Ethnography & Qualitative Methods, Theory