J. P. Linstroth lives in the United States and has been writing poetry since he was a boy. He obtained a D.Phil. (PhD) in Social and Cultural Anthropology from the University of Oxford and is an Adjunct Professor at Barry University and Faculty Member at the Catholic University of New Spain (UCNE). His books include: Marching Against Gender Practice: Political Imaginings in the Basqueland (2015, Lexington Books); The Forgotten Shore (Poetic Matrix Press, 2017); and Epochal Reckonings (2020, Proverse Publishers HK), Co-Winner of the 2019 Proverse Prize. Linstroth was a signatory of the Brussels Declaration for Peace to end ETA violence (2010). He was a co-recipient of an Alexander von Humboldt Foundation Grant (2005-2007) to study immigrant J. P. Linstroth lives in the United States and has been writing poetry since he was a boy. He obtained a D.Phil. (PhD) in Social and Cultural Anthropology from the University of Oxford and is an Adjunct Professor at Barry University and Faculty Member at the Catholic University of New Spain (UCNE). His books include: Marching Against Gender Practice: Political Imaginings in the Basqueland (2015, Lexington Books); The Forgotten Shore (Poetic Matrix Press, 2017); and Epochal Reckonings (2020, Proverse Publishers HK), Co-Winner of the 2019 Proverse Prize. Linstroth was a signatory of the Brussels Declaration for Peace to end ETA violence (2010). He was a co-recipient of an Alexander von Humboldt Foundation Grant (2005-2007) to study immigrant populations: Cubans, Haitians, and Guatemalan-Mayan immigrants in South Florida. He was awarded a J. William Fulbright Foreign Scholar Grant (2008-2009) to study urban Amerindians in Manaus, Brazil and to be a Visiting Professor at the Universida de Federal do Amazonas (UFAM). In 2017, he was awarded a Presidential Lifetime Achievement Award. Linstroth is a member of the Board of Directors of the International Peace Research Association Foundation (IPRAF). In 2019, he received a medal as a “Gentleman of Merit” and was inducted into La Noble Compañia de Bernardo de Galvez (The Noble Order of Bernardo de Galvez). In addition to many academic articles, he writes “opinion editorials” (“Op-Eds”) in many newspapers and online news sources, including CounterPunch, Des Moine Register, Euroscientist, L.A. Progressive, PeaceVoice, The Houston Chronicle, and Londonderry Sentinel. His academic research interests are cognition, ethno-nationalism, gender, genocide, history, immigrant advocacy, indigeneity, indigenous politics, indigenous rights, love, memory, minority rights, peace, peace-building, racism, social justice, and trauma....more
Please note, I am a contributor to 3 books attributed to my name. These are: 'Indigenous Studies and Engaged Anthropology: the Collaborative Moment' (2015, ed. Paul Sillitoe, London: Routledge); 'Nationalism and Intra-State Conflicts in the Post-Colonial World' (2015, ed. Michael Fonkem, Lanham, MD: Lexington Books; and 'Creating the Third Force: Indigenous Processes of Peacemaking' (2016, eds. Hamdesa Tuso and Maureen Flaherty, Lanham, MD: Lexington Books).
The books I have written and I am the sole author are: 'Marching Against Gender Practice: Political Imaginings in the Basqueland' (2015, Lanham, MD: Lexington Books); 'The Forgotten Shore' (2017, Poetic Matrix Press); and 'Epochal Reckonings' (2020, Proverse Publishers, Winner of the 2019 Proverse Prize).
The books I have written and I am the sole author are: 'Marching Against Gender Practice: Political Imaginings in the Basqueland' (2015, Lanham, MD: Lexington Books); 'The Forgotten Shore' (2017, Poetic Matrix Press); and 'Epochal Reckonings' (2020, Proverse Publishers, Winner of the 2019 Proverse Prize).
Thank you for your interest!