Richard Price (American anthropologist)

Richard Price (born November 30, 1941, in New York City) is an American anthropologist and historian, best known for his studies of the Caribbean and his experiments with writing ethnography.

Career

Price grew up in the Riverdale section of the Bronx and attended the Fieldston School. He received both Bachelors and Ph.D. degrees from Harvard University (1963, 1970), having conducted fieldwork in Peru, and then with Sally Price in Martinique, Mexico, Spain, and for two years among the Saamaka Maroons of Suriname. A year studying with Claude Lévi-Strauss in Paris and another in Amsterdam working with Dutch scholars of Maroons preceded his five years of teaching in the Department of Anthropology at Yale University. In 1974, he moved to Johns Hopkins University to found the Department of Anthropology, where he served three terms as chair, before leaving in 1986 for two years of teaching in Paris. A decade of freelance teaching (University of Minnesota, Stanford University, Princeton University, University of Florida, Universidade Federal da Bahia), while based in Martinique, ended with an appointment as Duane A. and Virginia S. Dittman Professor of American Studies, Anthropology, and History at the College of William and Mary. He has continued fieldwork with Maroons, notably in French Guiana and Suriname, as well as with his Martiniquan neighbors, into the present. Since the 1990s, he has worked with Saramaka Maroons in defense of their human rights, twice testifying as expert witness on behalf of the Saamakas in cases that they eventually won before the Inter-American Court for Human Rights in Costa Rica.[1]

Contributions

Price’s early contributions, influenced by his teachers Clyde Kluckhohn, Evon Z, Vogt, and Sidney W. Mintz, included the first conceptualization of Maroon (runaway slave) communities throughout the Americas in a comparative framework.[2] His demonstration that people previously considered largely “without history,” such as Saamaka Maroons (the descendants of runaway slaves), in fact possessed rich and deep historical consciousness has influenced historians as well as anthropologists.[3] For this work in what he calls “ethnographic history,” Price’s books have won numerous awards: First-Time won the Elsie Clews Parsons Prize of the American Folklore Society and Alabi’s World won the Albert J. Beveridge Award of the American Historical Association, the Gordon K. Lewis Award of the Caribbean Studies Association, and the School of American Research’s prestigious J. I. Staley Prize. An essay originally written in 1973 with Sidney Mintz, The Birth of African-American Culture, has had considerable influence on Afro-Americanist historians and anthropologists, sometimes inciting strong controversy about the extent to which enslaved Africans and their descendants “retained” aspects of their home cultures and societies and the extent to which they “created” new cultural and social forms in the Americas.[4] Price’s Travels with Tooy, an ethnography of the imaginaire of a Saamaka healer, attempts to transcend this dichotomy by demonstrating that historical processes of creolization involved people making creative uses of their varied, specific African heritages in the process of nation-building in the New World. In 2008, Travels with Tooy won the Victor Turner Prize in Ethnographic Writing, and in 2009, the Gordon K. and Sybil Lewis Award for Caribbean Scholarship and the Clifford Geertz Prize in the Anthropology of Religion. Price’s Rainforest Warriors tells the story of the Saamaka struggle to protect their territory against the encroachments of the State of Suriname. In 2012, the book won the Best Book Prize of the American Political Science Association in the field of human rights and the Senior Book Prize of the American Ethnological Society.

Several of Price’s books have been written with anthropologist and art critic Sally Price, including a critical edition of the famous eighteenth-century narrative of John Gabriel Stedman[5] and an exploration of the Caribbean paintings of African American artist Romare Bearden.[6] Since the 1980s, he has frequently experimented with new forms of writing culture, including experiments with typesetting and page layout[7] and authoring books that are in part memoirs (or highly reflexive anthropology)[8] and, in one case, an anthropological novel.[9] Despite the label of postmodern sometimes applied to his work, he prefers to consider himself an ethnographic historian.[10] Most of Price’s books continue to draw on his continuing ethnography with Suriname Maroons, but one innovative work, The Convict and The Colonel, centers on his four-decades-long relationship with Martinique, where he and Sally Price live for most of each year.[11] His books have been translated into French, Spanish, Dutch, German, Portuguese, and Saamakatongo.

In 2014, at a ceremony in Havana, he received the prestigious Premio Internacional Fernando Ortiz (“El Premio Internacional Fernando Ortiz es el más alto reconocimiento otorgado por la Fundación homónima por la actividad de toda una vida”], and the same year in France, he was decorated by France's Minister of Culture as "Chevalier des Arts et des Lettres" for his "contribution déterminante au rayonnement de la recherche anthropologique."

Books

References

Notes

  1. Richard Price, Rainforest Warriors: Human Rights on Trial, Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 2011
  2. Richard Price, Maroon Societies: Rebel Slave Communities in the Americas. New York: Doubleday/Anchor, 1973.
  3. Eric J. Hobsbawm, “Escaped Slaves of the Forest.” New York Review of Books 37(19) (1990): 46–48; David Scott, “That Event, This Memory: Notes on the Anthropology of African Diasporas in the New World.” Diaspora 1(1991):261-284; Michel-Rolph Trouillot, “The Caribbean Region: An Open Frontier in Anthropological Theory.” Annual Review of Anthropology 21 (1992):19-42.
  4. Sidney W. Mintz and Richard Price, The Birth of African-American Culture. Boston: Beacon Press, 1992; Yelvington, Kevin A. “The Anthropology of Afro-Latin America and the Caribbean: Diasporic Dimensions.” Annual Review of Anthropology 30(2001): 227-260; Richard Price, “On the Miracle of Creolization,” in Kevin A. Yelvington (ed.), Afro-Atlantic Dialogues: Anthropology in the Diaspora. Santa Fe: SAR Press, 2006, pp. 113-145, 206.
  5. John Gabriel Stedman's Narrative of a Five Years Expedition Against the Revolted Negroes of Surinam (Newly Transcribed from the Original 1790 Manuscript, Edited, and with an Introduction and Notes, by Richard and Sally Price). Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1988; David Brion Davis, “The Ends of Slavery.” New York Review of Books 36(5)(1989):29-34.
  6. Sally Price and Richard Price, Romare Bearden: The Caribbean Dimension. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 2006.
  7. Richard Price, First-Time: The Historical Vision of an Afro-American People. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1983; Richard Price, Alabi's World. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1990; Richard Price and Sally Price, Equatoria. New York: Routledge, 1992.
  8. Richard Price, The Convict and The Colonel. Boston: Beacon Press, 1998; Frances E. Mascia-Lees, Review of The Convict and the Colonel in American Anthropologist 101(1999):217-218; Jennifer Cole, Review of The Convict and the Colonel in American Ethnologist 26(1999):1011-1012.
  9. Richard Price and Sally Price, Enigma Variations. Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1995; Raymond Sokolov, “Faking it in the Green Hell.” Wall Street Journal 226(33)(08 August 1995):pA9.
  10. Anil Ramdas, “Verraad in de jungle.” NRC Handelsblad. Zaterdags Bijvoegsel, 25 mei, 1-2; Richard Price, “Invitation to Historians: Practices of Historical Narrative.” Rethinking History 5(2001):357-365.
  11. Greg Dening, Review of The Convict and the Colonel in Rethinking History 4(2000):220-223.

External links

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