Imani Perry
Professor
Center for African American Studies
Princeton University
Princeton, NJ
08544
Education
Doctor of Philosophy, June 2000
Program in the History of American Civilization
Harvard University Graduate School of Arts and Sciences
Dissertation: “Dusky Justice: Race in U.S. Law and Literature 1878-1914”
Major Fields: American Literature, American Studies
Juris Doctor, June 2000
Harvard Law School
Bachelor of Arts, June 1994
Yale College
Relevant Work Experience
Professor
Center for African American Studies
Princeton University
7/2009-present
Professor
Rutgers The State University of New Jersey
School of Law, Camden
6/2002-6/2009
Distinctions:
Inaugural Distinguished Visiting Fellow
,Princeton University Center for African American Studies, 2007-2008
Rutgers University Board of Trustees Fellowship for Scholarly Excellence (awarded annually to Rutgers faculty with most distinguished tenure packages Spring 2007, also I was promoted two steps from associate without tenure to full professor)
Visiting Professor of Law University of Pennsylvania Law School, Fall 2005
Selected Publications:
(in copy-editing) More Terrible, More Beautiful: The Embrace and Transcendence of Racial Inequality in the United States (New York: NYU Press, 2010)
“Tell Us How it Feels to be a Problem: Hip Hop Longings and Poor Young Black Men” in Against the Wall: Poor Young, Black and Male ed. Elijah Anderson (Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 2009)
“It Ain’t Hard to Tell: A Story of Lyrical Transcendence” in Born to Use Mics: Reading Nas’ Illmatic eds. Michael Eric Dyson, Sohail Dalautzai Basic Books, December 2009
“Do You Really Love New York?: Contemporary Intersections of Race, Television and Social Policy” The Berkeley Journal of African American Law and Policy, expected February 2008
“Black Arts and Good Law: Literary Arguments for Racial Justice in the Time of Plessy”
Law, Culture and Humanities (peer reviewed) 2008.
Book Review
The Brown Decision, Jim Crow and Southern Identity
By James C. Cobb (The University of Georgia Press, 2005)
25 Law and History Review, 679. Fall 2007.
“There Goes the Neighborhood”
02138 Magazine, Spring 2007
“The Practice of Racial Inequality in Post-Intent Times”
National Black Law Journal, Columbia Law School, 2007.
“Let Me Holler at You: African American Culture, Postmodern Feminism and Revisiting Sexual Harassment Law”
Georgetown Journal of Gender and the Law, 2007.
Introduction
Debating Race with Michael Eric Dyson by Michael Eric Dyson, Basic Civitas Books, 2007.
Prophets of the Hood: Politics and Poetics in Hip Hop (book)
Duke University Press, 12/2004
Introduction and Notes
Narrative of the Life of Sojourner Truth
Barnes and Nobles Classics 8/2005.
“Occupying the Universal, Embodying the Subject: African American Literary Jurisprudence” (peer reviewed)
Law and Literature Volume 17, Issue 1, 2005 (97-129).
“Cultural Studies, Critical Race Theory and Some Reflections on Methods”
Lat Crit IX Symposium “Countering Kulturkampf Through Critique and Justice Pedagogy” 50 Villanova Law Review 2005 (915-923).
“Dismantling The House of Plessy:
A Private Law Study of Race in Cultural and Legal History with Contemporary Resonances” (peer reviewed)
Studies in Law Politics and Society Volume 33, 2004 (91-159).
eds. Austin Sarat and Patricia Ewick
“Holistic Integration: An Anniversary Reflection on the Goals of Brown v. Board of Education” in Legacies of Brown: Multiracial Equity in American Education eds. Dorinda J. Carter, Stella M. Flores & Richard J. Reddick Harvard School of Education Review Press, 2004 (303-313).
“Buying White Beauty”
Cardozo Journal of Gender and Law
12 Cardozo J.L. & Gender 2006 (579-607).
“Of Desi, J.LO and Color Matters: Law, Critical Race Theory, The Architecture of Race”
Lat Crit VIII Symposium “City and the Citizen: Operations of Power, Strategies of Resistance”
52 Cleveland State Law Review 2004 (139-152).
Book Review Essay
“Crimes Without Punishment: White Neighbors’ Resistance to Black Entry” Steven Grant Meyer As Long As They Don’t Move Next Door: Segregation and Racial Conflict in American Neighborhoods (Rowman and Littlefield, 2000)
second author, co-authored with Leonard S. Rubinowitz
The Journal of Criminal Law and Criminology,
Northwestern University Volume 92, No. 2 (335-428).
“Who(se) am I? The Identity and Image of Women in Hip Hop” in Gender, Race, and Class in Media: A Text Reader 2nd edition
ed. Gail Dines and Jean Humez
Sage Publications, 2003 (136-148).
“Toasts, Jam and Libation: How We Place Malcolm in the Folk Tradition” in Teaching Malcolm X ed. Theresa Perry
Routledge Press, 1996 (171-186).
“It’s My Thang and I’ll Swing it The Way That I Feel: Sexuality and Black Women Rappers” Gender, Race, and Class in Media: A Text Reader 1st Edition ed. Gail Dines and Jean Humez Sage Publications, 1994 (524-530).