Website www.imaniperry.com | Main interest Law | |
![]() | ||
Alma mater Yale College Harvard UniversityHarvard Law School Books Prophets of the hood |
From tarzan to tonto 6 imani perry
Imani Perry (born 1972 in Birmingham, Alabama, United States) is an American interdisciplinary scholar of race and African American culture. She is currently the Hughes-Rogers Professor of African American Studies at Princeton University.
Contents
- From tarzan to tonto 6 imani perry
- Dr imani perry justice works 2014 keynote address
- Academia and Career
- Book titles
- Selected Journal Publications
- References

Perry is the author of two books and has published numerous articles on law, cultural studies, and African American studies. She also wrote the notes and introduction to the Barnes and Nobles Classics edition of the Narrative of Sojourner Truth. Her work is largely influenced by the Birmingham and Frankfurt Schools, Critical Legal Studies, Critical Race Theory, and African American literary criticism. Through her scholarship, Perry has made significant contributions to the academic study of race and American hip hop; she contributed a chapter to 2014's Born to Use Mics: Reading Nas's Illmatic.

Dr imani perry justice works 2014 keynote address
Academia and Career

Perry received her Bachelor of Arts Degree in American Studies and Literature from Yale University in 1994. She subsequently earned her Ph.D. in American Civilization from Harvard University and her J.D. from Harvard Law School (from which she graduated at the age of 27). She completed a Future Law Professor's Fellowship and received her LLM from Georgetown University Law Center. She credits her childhood exposure to diverse cultures, regions, and religions with her desire to study race.
Before joining the Princeton faculty, Perry taught at Rutgers School of Law in Camden for seven years. She received the New Professor of the Year award in her first year and was promoted to full professor at the end of five years, also winning the Board of Trustees Fellowship for Scholarly Excellence. Perry was also a visiting professor at the University of Pennsylvania Law School and an adjunct professor at both the Columbia University Institute for Research in African American Studies and Georgetown University Law Center.

In 2009, Perry left Rutgers to join the faculty of Princeton University. She currently holds the title of Hughes-Rogers Professor of African American Studies and is affiliated with the Programs in Law and Public Affairs and Gender and Sexuality Studies. She has two forthcoming books, one on the history of the black national anthem (from Oxford University Press) and another on gender, neoliberalism, and the digital age (from Duke University Press).
In August 2014, Perry appeared on the public radio and podcast On Being, discussing race, community, and American consciousness with host Krista Tippett.
Perry's research interests within African American studies include:
Book titles
Selected Journal Publications
See http://www.imaniperry.com/ for full list.