Vincent Jungkunz, Ph.D.
- Associate Professor, Political Science
- Member, Center for Law, Justice & Culture
Areas of Expertise
- Politics of Race
- Race and Racism
- Police Brutality
- Critical Race Theory
- White Supremacy
- Whiteness
- American Politics
- Race, Violence and Human Security
- Politics & Gender
- Masculinity
- Identity Politics
- Feminist Theory
- Feminism
- Politics of Silence
- Law and Society
- Democratic Theory
- Democracy
- Rights
- Politics of Resistance
Expert Bio
Jungkunz is an Associate Professor of Political Science, Provost-awarded Transformative Faculty Member, Dean鈥檚 Outstanding Teacher, and University Professor at 51社区. His theorizing, research, and writing have focused on Critical Race Theory, Whiteness, Democratic Theory, Feminist Theory, Gender, Political Theory, Law & Society, Politics of Resistance, Silence, Identity Formation, and American Politics. He teaches a wide range of courses on Critical Race Theory, Democratic Theory, Law and Society, Political Theory and American Politics including: 鈥淎merican Whiteness,鈥 鈥淭he Politics of Race,鈥 鈥淐ritical Race Theory,鈥 鈥淩ace, Violence, and Human Security,鈥 鈥淭he Politics of Visibility,鈥 鈥淧olitics and Film,鈥 鈥淒emocratic Theory,鈥 鈥淩esistance, Reform, and Revolution,鈥 鈥淭he Politics of Rights,鈥 鈥淧olitics in the United States,鈥 and 鈥淚ntroduction to Political Theory.鈥
Jungkunz鈥檚 writing has appeared in some of the top journals in political science and political theory; including 鈥淒eliberate Silences鈥 in Journal of Public Deliberation; 鈥淚gnorance, Innocence, and Democratic Responsibility: Seeing Race, Hearing Racism鈥 in Journal of Politics; 鈥淭he Promise of Democratic Silences鈥 in New Political Science; and 鈥淒ismantling Whiteness鈥 in Contemporary Political Theory. He is co-author of the edited volume, Political Theory and the Animal/Human Relationship, in which he has a chapter entitled 鈥淭he Silence of the Lambs.鈥 He is author of the chapter 鈥淒ialogic Politics and the End of Democracy鈥 in Challenges to Democratic Participation: Antipolitics, Deliberative Democracy, and Pluralism. His forthcoming book, Engaging Political Theory: Transformative Critiques & Visions for a Better World rejuvenates the relevance of political theory in our contemporary society, as what Aristotle called the 鈥渕aster science.鈥 Vince is writing a 5-volume work called The Contemporary White Supremacy Project in America; the first volume being White by Force.
He has dedicated the past several years to developing a theory that can help us better understand white supremacy, white identity, whiteness as power, property, privilege, and priority, and racism generally, culminating with his development of a cyclical model called 鈥渨hite by force,鈥 an identity that has been forged and perpetuated from force, physical and discursive violence, and brutality. This model can be applied to a variety of settings, especially that of police brutality in America. This model of identity formation can also be applied to other oppressive identities that have been constructed through physical and ideational violence, such as masculinity.