Kwame Anthony Appiah

Faculty Associate, Department of Politics; Laurance S. Rockefeller University Professor of Philosophy and the University Center for Human Values

 

208 Marx Hall
Princeton, NJ 08544

 

Office Hours: By appointment

 

Phone: 609.258.4302

Fax: 609.258.1502

Specialization: Moral and political philosophy; African and African-American studies; personal and political identity, multiculturalism, and nationalism

K. Anthony Appiah specializes in moral and political philosophy, African and African-American Studies, and issues of personal and political identity, multiculturalism and nationalism. His writings include books, essays and articles, along with reviews, short fiction, three novels, poetry, and an annotated collection of proverbs from his homeland, Asante, Ghana, on which he collaborated with his mother. With Amy Gutmann, he wrote Color Conscious: The Political Morality of Race, which won the Annual Book Award of the North American Society for Social Philosophy, the Ralph J. Bunche Award of the American Political Science Association and the Gustavus Myers Award for the Study of Human Rights. His book In My Father?s House: Africa in the Philosophy of Culture was honored by the African Studies Association, the Cleveland Foundation, and the Modern Language Association. Appiah also is co-editor, with Henry Louis Gates, Jr., of Africana: The Encyclopedia of the African and African-American Experience and the Encarta Africana CD-ROM.

B.A, M.A., Ph.D., Clare College, Cambridge University


Link to: Personal Web site

Link to: Curriculum Vitae