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Joshua M. Price
Assistant Professor
Office: UDC-411
Office Phone: 607-777-9203
Fax: 607-777-7587
E-mail: jmprice@binghamton.edu
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Director of Graduate Studies
Department of Human Development
Director of Graduate Studies
Program in Philosophy, Interpretation and Culture
Director
Broome/Tioga NAACP Jail Health Care Project
Associate Faculty
Program in Linguistics
State University of New York at Binghamton
International Advisor
Project for Research in Translation and Pedagogy
Universidad de Antioquia
Medellín, Colombia
Research Associate
Center for Translation and Intercultural Studies
Universidade de Espiritu Santo
Espiritu Santo, Brazil
Educational Background
• PhD, Socio-Cultural Anthropology, University of Chicago, 1998
Courses regularly taught
• Interdisciplinary Approaches in the Social Sciences
• Women and Violence
• Methods of Social Research
Current Research Interests
• Violence Against Women
• Non-Eurocentric theorizing
• Multicultural theory
• Translation and epistemology
• Activism against the prison-industrial complex
• Interdisciplinary social science
• Language and culture
• Prison abolition
Broome County Jail Health Care Project
Under the auspices of the NAACP, I have been working for the past two years with students, community activists, inmates, ex-inmates, and civil rights activists to document health care neglect and abuse at the local jail and advocate for prisoners. We also examine how incarceration affects entire communities.
Selected Publications
• Kusch, Rodolfo, Indigenous and Popular Thought in America. Translated by Maria Lugones and Joshua M. Price. Duke University Press (forthcoming).
• Price J.M., and Lugones, M.C. (2004) “Encuentros and Desencuentros: Reflections on the LatCrit Gathering in Latin America” Florida Journal of International Law. 16.3, summer. pp. 743 752
• Price, J.M. (2004) “Critical Race Theory’s Dream Narratives -- A Method for an Anti-Racist Social Science?” In Studies in Law, Politics, and Society.32. Edited by Austin Sarat and Patricia Ewick. London: Elsevier Publishers. pp. 39 77.
• Price, J.M. & Lugones, M.C. (2003) “Problems of Translation in Post-Colonial Thinking." Anthropology News, April, 2003.
• Price, J.M. & Lugones, M.C. (2003) “The Inseparability of Race, Class, and Gender.” Journal of U.S. Latino Studies 1.1.
• Price, J.M. (2002). “The Apotheosis of Home and the Maintenance of Spaces of Violence.” Hypatia 17.4.
• Price, J.M. (2001). “Hacia una contra-historia de antropología” Política y Sociedad 38.
• Price, J. M. (2001). “Writing as resistance: Sholom Ansky's contribution to a methodology.” En-Visioning, Studies in Image and Idiom, Spring.
• Price, J. M. (2001) “Violence against prostitutes and a Re-evaluation of the counterpublic sphere.” Genders 34, Global Publications.
• Price, J. M & Beltré, M. et.al. (2000). “Politicizing the everyday.” Radical Teacher, Spring.
• Price, J. M. (2000). “Hybrid languages, translation, and post-colonial challenges.” Translation Perspectives XI , Spring.
• Price, J. M. (1999). “Difficult maneuvers in discourse against Latina immigrants in the U.S.” Cardozo Journal of International and Comparative Law, 7(2), Fall.
• Price, J. M & Lugones, M. (1995). “Dominant culture: El deseo por un alma pobre.” In D. Harris (Ed.). Multiculturalism from the Margins. Bergin and Garvey Press.
• Price, J.M. & Lugones, M. (1995). “Cognitive Practices of Multiculturalism” Phoebe: A Journal of Feminist Theory and Aesthetics, 7. 1/2.
• Price, Joshua M. "Lenguas Híbridas, tradución, y desafíos poscoloniales" [translation of "Hybrid Languages, Translation, and Post-Colonial Challenges."] Translated by Martha Pulido and Constanza Guzmán. Ikala (Forthcoming).
• Lugones, Maria C. and Joshua M. Price. "Faith in unity: the nationalist erasure of multiplicity." Race and Nationalism. Edited by Linda Alcoff and Mariana Ortega. Forthcoming.
• Paley, Noelle and Joshua M. Price. "Violent Interruptions." Off our backs, Summer, 2007.
Teaching Awards
University and Chancellor’s Award for Excellence in Teaching, 2003-2004. Awarded by Office of Chancellor, State University of New York. Elected among Favorite Binghamton University Teachers by College-in-the-Woods Council. Spring, 2003.
Recognition for Outstanding Commitment to Student Access and Achievement. Service for Students with Disabilities, March, 2000.
Community Awards
“Citizen of the Year” Broome/Tioga NAACP, 2004.
Citation for Outstanding Contribution to Civil Rights of New Yorkers, New York State Assembly. 2004.
Presentations
Invited
“Rethinking Prisoner Re-entry” Panel Presentation, Center for the Research on Women, CUNY Graduate Center. June 7, 2005.
“The Meaning of Punishment in Plato’s Gorgias” with Shai Lavi. Theories of Meaning in Plato’s Gorgias Conference. Wissenschaftskolleg, Berlin, February, 2005.
“Translating Knowledge across the Disciplines.” Lecture Series with Shai Lavi, Center for the Humanities, Central European University, January, 2005.
“Centering Meaning on Misunderstanding.” Workshop on Theories of Meaning, Center for the Humanities, Central European University, June, 2004.
“A Philosophy, Ethics, and Sociology of Bewilderment.” Department of Philosophy, Central European University, June, 2004.
“Arguedas' Mestizo Reply to Modernity's Translation Theory.” Translation Theory Speaker Series, Translation Center, Binghamton University, March 4, 2004.
“Hacia un contradiscurso de la antropología.” Graduate seminar in anthropology, Instituto de Altos Estudios Sociales and Instituto de Desarrollo Económico y Social, Buenos Aires, October 16, 2003.
“Retórica y Locación.” Department of Social Sciences, University of Buenos Aires, Buenos Aires, June, 2003.
“Why Doesn’t She Just Leave?” Department of Philosophy and Women’s Studies, Le Moyne College, March 20, 2003.
“The Possibility of Ethics in Research in Response to Workers’ Requests.” Radical Theory and Practice Against Neoliberalism (Conference) State University of New York at Binghamton, May 3-4, 2001.
“Traducción en un contexto colonial: Pensando de nuevo la configuración de fronteras.” Centro de Estudios Subalternos, Buenos Aires, Argentina, August, 2000. “Antropología y violencia.” Instituto Interdisciplinario Tilcara, Facultad de Filosofía y Letras, Universidad de Buenos Aires, Argentina, July, 2000.
“Hacia una contra-historia de antropología.” Facultad de Humanidades y Ciencias Sociales, Universidad Nacional de Jujuy, Argentina, July 2000.
“Battered Women and Judgments of Space: Competing Logics of Violence in Domestic Violence Court.” New School for Social Research May 5, 1998.
“Traveling Theory and Homogenizing Space: The Wheel of Power and Control.” Anthropology Department, Western Michigan University, May, 1998. “Are the New Domestic Violence Courts Good For Battered Women?” Cardozo Law School, March 23, 1997.
“Dominant Culture.” Interrogating Intersections: Women's Studies and Ethnic Studies Conference at State University of New York College at Oneonta. Winter, 1995.
"Why Doesn't She Just Leave?" Women's Studies Lecture Series at the Center for Multicultural Experience, State University of New York College at Oneonta. Autumn, 1994.
Refereed
“Translating Social Science: Good versus Bad Utopianism.” Philosophy, Interpretation and Culture Annual Conference. Binghamton, March, 2005.
“What is the ‘Public’ in ‘Public Interest Anthropology’?” Meetings of the American Anthropological Association, San Francisco, November, 2004.
“Trans-Modernity: Translation Theory from the Margins.” University of Barcelona, November, 2004.
“Disembodied Epistemologies and Metonymic Reason.” Ethics and Epistemologies of Ignorance Conference. Pennsylvania State University, March, 2004.
“Rhetorics of Provocation: Critical Race Theorists and Interpretation of Dreams.” Meetings of Law and Society Association, University of Pittsburgh, June 8, 2003.
“Translating Arguedas: Notes in Support of a Postcolonial Critique of Western Science.” Congrès annuel de la fédération canadienne des sciences humaines et socials, Halifax, Canada, May 29, 2003.
“Rhetorics of Provocation: Critical Race Theorists and Interpretation of Dreams.” Meetings of Law, Culture and Humanities Society, Cardozo Law School, March 8, 2003
“Problems of Translation.” Meetings of the American Anthropological Association, New Orleans, November, 2002.
“Notes in Support of a Postcolonial Critique of Western Science.” Meetings of the American Anthropological Association, Washington DC. November 28, 2001.
“Language of Governmentality.” Law and Society Association Meetings, Central European University, Budapest, Hungary, July 7, 2001.
“Border Derive.” Remapping the Zones of Borderlands: Cultural Practice and Representation, Department of Communications, University of Massachusetts Amherst, March 30-1, 2001.
“The Apotheosis of Home and the Maintenance of Spaces of Violence.” Inequality in America: The Significance of Race, Class, Sexuality, and Gender, State University of New York at Binghamton, February 22, 2001.
“The Question of ‘Credibility’ in Criminology and The Challenge of Resistant Methodologies.” Meetings of the American Anthropological Association, San Francisco, November 15, 2000.
“The Question of ‘Credibility’ in Criminology and The Challenge of Resistant Methodologies.” Law and Society Meetings, Miami, May, 2000.
“The Question of ‘Credibility’ in Criminology and The Challenge of Resistant Methodologies.” Law, Culture, and the Humanities Conference, Georgetown University Law School, March 10, 2000.
“Counterpublics and Discourse by Battered Prostitutes.” Law, Culture, and the Humanities Conference, Wake Forest University Law School, March 14, 1999.
“The Politics of Coalition.” Panel at Commonfire Conference, Tucson, Arizona, February 28, 1999. “Writing from Location About Violence Against Women.” Philosophy, Interpretation, and Culture Conference, Binghamton, New York, April 24, 1998.
“Translating Within Hybrid Languages.” Philosophy, Interpretation, and Culture Conference, Binghamton, New York, April 23, 1998.
“The Space of the Social Contract in Violence Against Women: Brutality, Sexuality, and Conceptual Exclusions.” Gendered (Re)Visions Conference, State University of New York at Binghamton, May 10, 1996.
“Rupturing the Apotheosis of Home: Towards a Theorization of Multiplicitous Space.” Gender, Technology and Place Conference, Institute for Research on Women, Rutgers University, March 30, 1996.
“Rupturing the Apotheosis of Home: Towards a Theorization of Multiplicitous Space.” Crossing the Boundaries IV Conference, State University of New York at Binghamton, March 23, 1996
“Pedagogy and Difference.” Crossing the Boundaries II Conference, State University of New York at Binghamton, Spring, 1995.
“Methodologies of Studying Violence against Women.” Philosophy, Interpretation, and Culture Conference, State University of New York at Binghamton, Winter, 1995.
“Justice and Political Education: Conscientización Among Latinos in the U.S.” Eyes on the Mosaic: Inquiries and Explorations in Race and Ethnic Studies Conference, University of Chicago. April, 1993.