Benjamin Lee is a professor of anthropology and philosophy at The New School, where he also served as provost from 2006 until 2008. Lee's primary academic interests include contemporary China; the cultural dimensions of globalization, particularly the effects of global financial flows; and modern theories of language.
Lee graduated from Johns Hopkins University with a BA in psychology and later attended the University of Chicago, where he received an MA in human development and a PhD in anthropology.
Selected publications
- From Primitives to Derivatives (coauthor, 2004)
 - Derivatives and the Globalization of Risk (coauthor, 2004)
 - "The Subjects of Circulation," in U. Hedetoft and M. Hjort (Eds.)
 - The Postnational Self: Belonging and Identity (2002)
 - "Cultures of Circulation: The Imaginations of Modernity," Public Culture (coauthor, 2002)
 - "Peoples and Publics," Public Culture (1998)
 - Talking Heads: Language, Metalanguage, and the Semiotics of Subjectivity (1997)
 - "Critical Internationalism," Public Culture (1995)
 - "Going Public," Public Culture (1993)
 - Semiotics, Self, and Society (coeditor, 1989)
 - Semiotic Origins of the Mind Body Dualism (in Semiotics, Self, ...)
 - Developmental Approaches to the Self (coeditor, 1983)
 - Psychosocial Theories of the Self (editor, 1982)
 - The Development of Adaptive Intelligence (coauthor, 1974)
 
References
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