Jacqueline Hogan

Professor of Sociology and Anthropology
Bradley Hall 115
(309) 677-2402
jlhogan@bradley.edu
Ph.D., Sociology, University of Tasmania
M.A., Anthropology, University of Iowa
B.A., English Literature and Linguistics, California State University-Chico
Biography
Jackie Hogan is professor of sociology and anthropology and Director of ADVANCE BU, an NSF-funded program to identify and address intersectional inequities in the faculty ranks. She also teaches courses in the Women’s Studies program, and contributes to the University’s Study Abroad program, and to Bradley’s Body Project, a collaborative effort by Bradley faculty, students and staff to promote healthy body image and combat eating disorders (http://thebodyproject.bradley.edu).
Dr. Hogan came to Bradley in fall of 2000 from the University of Tasmania in Australia, where she earned her Ph.D. in sociology. Her research focuses on the links between gender, race and national identity in the US, UK, Australia and Japan; on the commodification of bodies in consumer societies; and on structured inequalities in the professorate. She earned her master’s degree in anthropology from the University of Iowa, where she focused on Japanese culture and society.
Teaching
Dr. Hogan teaches a variety of courses pertaining to global cultures and to issues of diversity and social inequality. She offers courses in both sociology and anthropology, as well as seminars on “imagined communities” death practices around the world, and and body commodification. Through her work on the Intellectual and Cultural Activities Committee, she also helps bring a wide variety of speakers to campus each semester.
Scholarship
Dr. Hogan has published articles in a variety of scholarly journals including the Journal of Sociology; Media, Culture and Society; Mass Communication and Society; National Identities; the Journal of Sport and Social Issues; Japanese Studies; and the Journal of Australian Studies. Her books Include Gender, Race and National Identity: Nations of Flesh and Blood (2009), Lincoln, Inc.: Selling the Sixteenth President in Contemporary America (2011), Roots Quest: Inside America's Genealogy Boom (2019), and Consuming Bodies: Body Commodification and Embodiment In Late Capitalist Societies (2025).
Selected Articles and Chapters
- Hogan, J. (forthcoming) “On Makeover Culture, Status Degradation Ceremonies, and Challenging the Beauty Industries,” Journal of Autoethnography.
- Hogan, J. (2025) “Thinking Bodies: A Conceptual Framework for the Study of Bodies and Embodiment,” in Hogan, J. & S. Whetstone (eds) Consuming Bodies: Body Commodification and Embodiment in Late Capitalist Societies. Routledge, New York.
- Hogan, J. (2025) “Risky Bodies: BRCA-Testing, Risk, and the Duty to Be Well,” in Hogan, J. & S. Whetstone (eds) Consuming Bodies: Body Commodification and Embodiment in Late Capitalist Societies. Routledge, New York.
- Hogan, J. & J. Decker (2021) “Hybridities on the Final Frontier: Bio-utilitarianism in Star Trek,” Interdisciplinary Literary Studies, Vol 23, No. 3.
- Hogan, J. (2021) “Anatomy of a Rape: Sexual Violence and Secondary Victimization Scripts in U.S. Film and Television, 1959-2019,” Crime, Media, Culture. doi:1177/17416590211000388
- Haltinner & J. Hogan (2018) “Comparing Cabals: The Role of Conspiracy Ideation in Right-Wing Populist Groups of the U.S. and U.K.,” in FernandoLopez-Alves (ed) National Populism in Europe and the Americas, Routledge, New York & London. (Hardcover ISBN 9781138336117; paperback ISBN 9781138343078.)
- Hogan, J. & K Haltinner (2015). “Floods, Invaders, and Parasites: Immigration Threat Narratives and Right-Wing Populism in the US, UK and Australia,” Journal of Intercultural Studies, 36, No. 5, 520-543.
- Hogan, Jacqueline, L. 2010. “Gendered and racialised discourses of national identity in Baz Luhrmann's Australia,” Journal of Australian Studies 34 (Issue 1).
- Hogan, Jacqueline, L. 2006. “Letters to the editor in the ‘war on terror’: a cross-national study.” Mass Communication and Society 7: 63-83.
- Hogan, Jacqueline, L. 2005. “Gender, ethnicity and national identity in Australian and Japanese television Advertisements.” National Identities 7: 193-211.
- Hogan, Jacqueline, L. 2004. “Constructing the global in two rural communities in Australia and Japan.” Journal of Sociology 40: 21-40.
- Hogan, Jacqueline, L. 2003. “Staging the nation: gendered and ethnicized discourses of national identity in Olympic opening ceremonies.” Journal of Sport and Social Issues 27: 100-123.
- Hogan, Jacqueline, L. 2003. “The social significance of English loanwords in Japan.” Japanese Studies 23.
- Hogan, Jacqueline, L. 2003. “The Return to Imperialism: Restoring American Manhood.” 2003. Clio’s Psyche, quarterly journal of the Psychohistory Forum, December: 84-85.
- Hogan, Jacqueline, L. 1999. “Globalization and gendered national identities in the television advertisements of Japan and Australia.” Media, Culture and Society 21:743-75