New Books in Critical Theory

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

Jan 31, 2026
Dr. Blair L.M. Kelley, Joel R. Williamson Distinguished Professor and historian of African American labor, reconnects Black working-class life to US history. She discusses laundresses, Pullman porters, domestic maids, and postal workers. She explains her use of family stories, oral histories, and photographs. She traces policy exclusions and the networks that sustained Black labor and community.
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ANECDOTE

Family Story Sparked The Project

  • Blair L.M. Kelly traced her book idea to family stories about migration and labor that shaped her approach.
  • She used her grandfather and father's experiences to humanize broader Black working-class history.
ANECDOTE

Oral Histories Met Family Archives

  • Kelly used oral histories like Behind the Veil and graduate-student searches to connect archival records with living memories.
  • She found interviewees from counties linked to her ancestors, creating resonant overlaps between archive and family lore.
INSIGHT

Networks Over Bootstrap Myth

  • Kelly argues Black workers relied on networks and collective support shaped by slavery's trauma rather than the individualist bootstrap myth.
  • Those networks produced an ethic and forms of solidarity central to Black working-class survival and activism.
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