PhD (Brandeis University)
Reader in History
On leave, 2011-12
Tel: +44 (0)28 9097 3435
E-mail: b.kelly@qub.ac.uk
Office: 14UQ.105
Brian Kelly is one of three historians in the School specializing in the US South. A labour historian with a special interest in race and class relations in the post-Civil War South, his early work explored the record of interracial cooperation between black and white workers in industrial Birmingham, Alabama. His first book, Race, Class and Power in the Alabama Coalfields, 1908-1921 (Illinois, 2001), won a number of awards, including the Southern Historical Association’s H. L. Mitchell Prize for an outstanding book in Southern working-class history and its Frances Butler Simkins Award for the best first book by an author in Southern history. In the years since he has published widely on the problem of racial antagonism and its impact on working-class politics in the US, with studies that range from labour abolition in the antebellum period through to the 1968 Memphis sanitation strike, during which the Rev. Martin Luther King, Jr. was assassinated. Formerly a Walter Hines Page Fellow at the National Humanities Center in North Carolina, he holds non-residential fellowships at the Institute for Southern Studies (University of South Carolina) and the W. E. B. Du Bois Institute (Harvard University).
In recent years his research interests have shifted to the formative struggles that followed US slave emancipation. He directs the After Slavery Project, an international research collaboration funded by the AHRC. With project partners Bruce Baker and Susan O’Donovan he designed and built the After Slavery website, now recognized by leading international scholars as an exceptional resource for educators working in African American and Southern labor history. He organized the 2008 Wiles Colloquium, on “Rethinking Reconstruction,” and a major conference on “Race, Labor and Citizenship in the Post-emancipation South,” held at the College of Charleston (South Carolina) in March 2010. He is completing an edited collection based on the Wiles papers and working on an extended monograph on grassroots political mobilisation in Reconstruction South Carolina.
Books:
Articles and chapters:
On sabbatical leave for 2011-12, but normally teaches on the American South survey at Level II and on two upper level seminars, After Slavery and The American Civil War & Reconstruction. Willing to supervise any advanced project on topics related to American social history. Teaches on the following modules:
Undergraduate
HIS2028: The American South, 1619-1865
HIS2029: The American South, 1865-1980
HIS3082: After Slavery: Race, Labour and Politics in the Post-Emancipation US South
HIS3035: The American Civil War & Reconstruction
Postgraduate:
HIS7035: Themes in American Historiography
HIS7056: Topics in US History