Robin D. G. Kelley | |
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Born | Robin Davis Gibran Kelley March 14, 1962 New York City, US |
Occupation | Historian and academic |
Alma mater | California State University, Long Beach (BA) University of California, Los Angeles (MA, PhD) |
Genre | History |
Employer | UCLA |
Notable works | Race Rebels: Culture, Politics, and the Black Working Class (1994) |
Robin Davis Gibran Kelley (born March 14, 1962)[1] is an American historian and academic, who is the Gary B. Nash Professor of American History at the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA).[2][3]
From 2006 to 2011, he was Professor of American Studies and Ethnicity at the University of Southern California (USC),[4] and from 2003 to 2006 he was the William B. Ransford Professor of Cultural and Historical Studies at Columbia University. From 1994 to 2003, he was a professor of history and Africana Studies at New York University (NYU) as well the chair of NYU's history department from 2002 to 2003.[5] Kelley has also served as a Hess Scholar-in-Residence at Brooklyn College. In the summer of 2000, he was honored as a Montgomery Fellow at Dartmouth College, where he taught and mentored a class of sophomores, as well as wrote the majority of the book Freedom Dreams.
During the academic year 2009–10, Kelley served as Harold Vyvyan Harmsworth Professor of American History at Oxford University,[6] the first African-American historian to do so since the chair was established in 1922. He was awarded the Guggenheim Fellowship in 2014.[7] He is also the author of a 2009 biography of Thelonious Monk.
Kelley has described himself as a Marxist surrealist feminist.[8]