Visit Dr Emma Casey's profile on the York Research Database to:
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I grew up in the north east of England during a time of rapid industrial decline, where burgeoning social inequalities sat alongside the rapid emergence of new forms of popular culture and consumer practices. Sociology has long provided me with the opportunity to make sense of these social and cultural transformations.
Between 1995 and 1998 I came to the University of York to study Sociology as an undergraduate. I then moved to London in the late 1990s and worked in a bookshop while I searched for postgraduate funding. I completed my PhD at London Metropolitan University in 2004. Since then I have developed research which broadly examines the various ways in which structural inequalities of class, race and gender are mapped onto everyday cultural and consumer practices.
Underpinning my research and teaching, is a commitment to countering mainstream sociological scholarship which has often silenced the voices of marginalised people. To this end, my research attempts to pull to the surface hitherto overlooked cultural processes and practices. My research is particularly inspired by feminist theoretical approaches and ways of seeing the world.
I joined the Department of Sociology in 2022 as Senior Lecturer in Sociology.
I am Senior Lecturer in Sociology in the Department of Sociology at York. My research broadly seeks to readdress the relative lack of prominence of sociological studies of domestic life and experiences. My edited collection 'Gender and Consumption' with Prof Lydia Martens (Keele University) brought together feminist academics working in the field of domestic consumer economies, while my doctoral research echoed this focus by producing one of the first studies of domestic routines and rituals of gambling. This work informed my sole-authored monograph 'Women, Pleasure and the Gambling Experience', shortlisted for the BSA Philip Abrams Memorial Prize.
In addition to my work on gambling, my work examines the social and cultural history of a variety of everyday consumption practices, including catalogues, home-baking, shopping malls and department stores. Most recently, I have collaborated with Prof Jo Littler (City University) on research exploring the popular appeal of 'cleanfluencing' and with Prof Sarah Childs (Royal Holloway) and Rupa Huq, MP on a symposium and edited collection on the topic of gender and COVID_19.
I am currently working on a sole authored monograph entitled ‘The Return of the Housewife’ which will explore contemporary digital representations of domestic labour. From 2022 I am co-editor of the journal Critical Gambling Studies, an interdisciplinary and international journal which seeks to expand critical and cultural understandings of gambling.
Funded research includes an ESRC grant for a project exploring gambling and households (RES-000-22-4314). The project established a major new directive on gambling at Mass Observation Archive. Between 2014-2021 I sat on the editorial board of Sociology, the flagship journal of the BSA. I am on the Executive Board of the European Sociological Association Consumption Research Network and co-convenor of the BSA Consumption Study Group.
At York, I chair the Department Exceptional Circumstances Committee.
You can listen to recent interviews and discussions here: