New Books Network

Blair Kelley, "Black Folk: The Roots of the Black Working Class" (LIveright, 2023)

Jan 31, 2026
Dr. Blair L.M. Kelley, a historian of African American labor and Southern history, explores how laundresses, Pullman porters, maids, and postal workers shaped community, unions, and citizenship. She uses family archives and oral histories. The conversation highlights archival photos, labor organization, New Deal exclusions, and links between past struggles and today’s labor movements.
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ANECDOTE

Family Stories Shaped The Project

  • Blair L.M. Kelly discovered the book idea through a pitch from her editor and her family's migration stories shaped the book's approach.
  • She weaves family oral histories with archival records to humanize broader labor history.
INSIGHT

Photographs Anchor Worker Histories

  • Kelly and students built a large photo archive to illustrate occupational lives and poignant labor scenes.
  • Visuals helped connect family geography to national labor stories and deepen readers' empathy.
INSIGHT

Collective Networks Over Individualism

  • The American myth of rugged individualism contrasts with Black workers' reliance on kin and community networks.
  • Black labor histories reveal collective strategies for survival and political power.
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