Perry, a contributor to The Atlantic and author of eight books, including recent releases “A Dangerously High Threshold for Pain” (2023) and “Breathe: A Letter to My Sons” (2019), is at work on the forthcoming “Black in Blues,” which will explore the history of Black identity in relation to the color blue. Perry studied American Studies and Literature as an undergraduate at Yale University before earning a J.D. and Ph.D. at Harvard in 2000.
Perry started out as a legal scholar, with her first professorship at Rutgers Law School. But she worked across traditional academic borders from the start. “I was teaching law but also writing and thinking about law along with culture, along with music, along with art, along with politics — and of course race and gender,” she recalled.
That interdisciplinary approach was recognized with an appointment in the Department of African American Studies at Princeton University, where Perry taught for 14 years. “African American studies is one of the few areas that fully lets you transcend the boundaries of discipline,” she said. “In some ways, the difficulty of understanding race and racialization is such that you need more than one discipline.”
She joined the Harvard faculty this summer with appointments in both the African and African American Studies department and in Women, Gender and Sexuality. “So much of my work has been in Women and Gender Studies, but I haven’t taught frequently in that area,” said Perry, who is teaching a course on Black feminist theory this semester. “It’s nice to translate more of my intellectual life into the classroom.”
Perry also partnered with Professor of Education Jarvis R. Givens to launch The Black Teacher Archive this month. “The idea came from my mother, Theresa Perry, who said, ‘We need to figure out how to digitize materials from what were called the Colored Teachers Associations,’” Perry recalled. Harvard now hosts this open-access, searchable collection of publications from Black teacher associations, dating back to the late 19th century.
“Imani Perry is a scholar of remarkable breadth, impact, and telling insight,” said Lawrence D. Bobo, dean of Social Science. “She stands tall among even the most rarified set of intellectuals who have imaginatively plumbed the space where matters of space and place, culture and cultural production, race and racism, gender and sexuality all meet. It is only fitting that the MacArthur Foundation should recognize Imani Perry as, simply put, a genius!”
The genius label also describes Buenrostro, a cellular and molecular biologist who joined the Harvard faculty in 2019 and studies the changing dials within cells that regulate gene expression, a discipline broadly known as epigenetics. While still a graduate student at Stanford University, he worked with colleagues to develop a genome-wide investigation tool called ATAC-seq (pronounced “attack-seek”) that can detect which portions of a cell’s genetic material are “open,” and therefore active, or “closed.” Open and accessible regions of each genome can then be analyzed with a computational tool that reads out an epigenomic profile. This profile contains detailed information about small changes taking place in individual cells in different contexts, including those associated with aging or cancer.