Izabela Wagner | |
Birth Name: | Izabela Wagner |
Birth Place: | Wołów, near Wrocław, Poland |
Citizenship: | Polish and French |
Children: | 2 |
Workplaces: | Collegium Civitas Cooperative University-Warsaw & ICM Paris |
Doctoral Advisor: | Jean-Michel Chapoulie |
Thesis Title: | La production sociale de violonistes virtuoses |
Thesis Year: | 2006 |
Izabela Wagner-Saffray (born 3 November 1964) is a Polish-born European sociologist. Wagner has been an Associate Professor at the Institute of Sociology at Collegium Civitas in Warsaw since December 2019. She is also a Fellow at ICM (Institut Convergence Migration) in Paris since 2019. Her sociological research is concerned with violin virtuosos. Wagner's contributions are focused on the careers of artists and intellectuals, professional socialization and geographic mobility, migrations and forced-migrations.
Wagner was born on 3 November 1964 in Wołów, Poland, in a family of musicians. She began studying sociology at the School for Advanced Studies in the Social Sciences (EHESS) in Paris in 1996, and completed her Ph.D. there in 2006, defending the dissertation La production sociale de violonistes virtuoses ("Social Production of Virtuosoe)" with as her thesis advisor.[1] [2]
Wagner worked at the musical academia as a Jaques-Dalcroze method specialist, as Assistant Professor at the University of Music in Poznań, Poland in 1986-87 and at Conservatory of Music in Nanterre, France in 1988 - 2001. Later since 2008 she worked at the Institute of Sociology - University of Warsaw.
Wagner has been an Associate Professor at the Institute of Sociology at Collegium Civitas in Warsaw since December 2019. She is also a Fellow at ICM (Institut Convergence Migration) in Paris since 2019.
Within the field of sociological research, Wagner's contributions are focused on the careers of artists and intellectuals, professional socialization and geographic mobility, migrations and forced-migrations. Linking history with sociology she wrote about antisemitism in Europe in 20th and 21st centuries.
Wagner did sociological research mainly in Europe but also in the US and China. She was a visiting scholar at Harvard (2010/2011) and the New School for Social Research in New York City (2016). Wagner's monographs have appeared in Chinese,[3] English, Polish, Portuguese, and Russian.[4]
Wagner's research activity addresses Musicology, Ethnomusicology, Composition, Music Education, Global Jazz Studies, Music Industry, Music Performance, and Music Performance Studies.[5]