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Philosopher Kwame Anthony Appiah to Leave Princeton for NYU

By Stacey Patton November 27, 2013
Kwame Anthony Appiah: “NYU made me an offer on the pedagogical and intellectual side that I couldn’t refuse.”
Kwame Anthony Appiah: “NYU made me an offer on the pedagogical and intellectual side that I couldn’t refuse.”Princeton U.

In early October a rumor circulated that New York University was trying to lure Kwame Anthony Appiah, one of the nation’s best-known philosophers and a leading thinker on race and society, away from Princeton University, where he has taught for 11 years.

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In early October a rumor circulated that New York University was trying to lure Kwame Anthony Appiah, one of the nation’s best-known philosophers and a leading thinker on race and society, away from Princeton University, where he has taught for 11 years.

Asked about it at the time, Mr. Appiah told The Chronicle in an email, “That could happen in the future, but I don’t have an offer from NYU.”

Mr. Appiah received the official offer letter on Monday, and the university announced on Tuesday that the scholar, born in London and raised in Ghana, woud join the NYU faculty in January. Mr. Appiah will hold appointments in the philosophy department and at NYU’s School of Law. He will spend half the year in New York teaching; the other half of the year he will teach and lecture at the university’s overseas campuses, principally Abu Dhabi.

“You don’t make a move away from a great university like Princeton unless there’s a really attractive offer,” Mr. Appiah said in a phone interview. And Princeton did “generously” match NYU’s offer in an attempt to keep him, he said. But it wasn’t money that drew him.

“NYU has offered me the chance to pursue a new intellectual challenge and to finally have a job in the same town as my spouse,” Henry Finder, The New Yorker’s editorial director. During Mr. Appiah’s time at Princeton the couple have divided their time between New York City and Princeton. Now they will move into a university-owned apartment in Tribeca.

“NYU made me an offer on the pedagogical and intellectual side that I couldn’t refuse,” said Mr. Appiah. “Professionally, the thing that really got me hooked was this challenge of trying to think about how to take advantage of NYU’s global network university and how we teach about global ethics issues.”

Since 2010, when the university started NYU-Abu Dhabi, it has also opened “portal campuses” or academic centers in a dozen cities, including Accra, Berlin, Buenos Aires, Shanghai, Tel Aviv, and Washington, D.C. Mr. Appiah sees an opportunity for him to use virtual technologies to bring students in different places together in small seminar courses, where they can grapple with global issues such as gender, sexual identity, human rights, and the unequal distribution of wealth.

“I could have gone on pretty happy at Princeton doing the things I’ve been doing, but this is a different kind of challenge as a teacher and scholar,” he said. “It’s a new experiment. I’m doing things I haven’t done before. We are going to have to figure out how to teach and research side by side across the world.”

Mr. Appiah, who is 59, has published in philosophy of language, philosophy of mind, political theory, moral philosophy, and African and African-American literary and cultural studies. His prize-winning books include The Ethics of Identity and Cosmopolitanism. With Henry Louis Gates Jr. he is the editor of Africana: The Encyclopedia of the African and African-American Experience. And in 2012 he was one of eight scholars to receive the National Humanities Medal from President Obama.

Michael A. Smith, chair of Princeton’s philosophy department said he was not surprised to learn that Mr. Appiah was leaving. He saw it coming. But the news has left students and faculty members bereft because Mr. Appiah is a popular professor.

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“Anthony is an incredible colleague. He’s had a productive time while he’s been here. He’s been wanting to live in New York City with his partner, and everyone completely understands that, and we wish him the best,” Mr. Smith said. Finding a replacement will be difficult. “It would be completely mistaken to look at the hole that Anthony has left and think you could fill it.”

“NYU couldn’t have chosen a better person to help build an international teaching program with new technology,” he added. “I just wish they’d do it without pinching our fantastic faculty.”

We welcome your thoughts and questions about this article. Please email the editors or submit a letter for publication.
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Stacey Patton
About the Author
Stacey Patton
Stacey Patton, who joined The Chronicle of Higher Education in 2011, wrote about graduate students. Her coverage areas included adjuncts, career outcomes for Ph.D.’s, diversity among doctoral students in science, technology, engineering, and math fields, and students navigating the graduate-school experience.
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