Profile
Professor Sonali Perera is the author of No Country: Working-Class Writing in the Age of Globalization (Columbia University Press, 2014), and is currently at work on her second book, Between Imperialism and Internationalism: World Literature and Human Rights.
Much of her scholarship is based on the premise that postcolonial studies, as it was conceptualized by its rigorous, most skeptical practitioners, provides methodologies for parsing the changing meanings of political economy, sovereignty, and empire in today’s globalized world.
Her work has appeared in PMLA (Publications of the Modern Language Association of America), differences: A Journal of Feminist Cultural Studies, Postcolonial Studies, Signs: Journal of Women and Culture in Society (films for the feminist classroom), and in interdisciplinary anthologies, including South Asian Feminisms (Duke UP 2012) and The State of Human Rights (2020). From 2006-2008, she served on the executive board of directors of SAALT (South Asian Americans Leading Together), a national non-profit organization dedicated to ensuring civil rights and social justice for marginalized members of the South Asian immigrant community in America.
At Hunter, Professor Perera is a faculty associate of the Roosevelt House Public Policy Institute Human Rights Program. She serves on the Council on Honors for the Thomas Hunter Honors Program. She is affiliated faculty with the Department of Women and Gender Studies. At the CUNY Graduate Center, Professor Perera is a member of the doctoral faculty of the Departments of English and Comparative Literature.