
Keisha Blain
Biography
Keisha N. Blain, a 2022 Guggenheim Fellow and Class of 2022 Carnegie Fellow, is
an award-winning historian of the 20th century United States with broad interests and
specializations in African American History, the modern African Diaspora, and
Women’s and Gender Studies. She completed a Ph.D. in History from Princeton
University in 2014. Professor Blain is the author of Set the World on Fire: Black
Nationalist Women and the Global Struggle for Freedom (University of Pennsylvania
Press, 2018). The book won the 2018 First Book Award from the Berkshire
Conference of Women Historians and the 2019 Darlene Clark Hine Award from the
Organization of American Historians. Her second book, Until I Am Free: Fannie Lou
Hamer's Enduring Message to America (Beacon Press, 2021), was nominated for an
NAACP Image Award and a finalist for the 2022 National Book Critics Circle
Award.
Professor Blain has published five edited volumes. She is the co-editor of To Turn the
Whole World Over: Black Women and Internationalism (University of Illinois Press,
2019); New Perspectives on the Black Intellectual Tradition (Northwestern University
Press, 2018); Charleston Syllabus: Readings on Race, Racism, and Racial
Violence (University of Georgia Press, 2016); and Four Hundred Souls: A Community
History of African America, 1619-2019 (Penguin Random House/One World,
2021). Four Hundred Souls debuted at #1 on the New York Times Best Sellers'; list
and was selected as a finalist for the 2022 Carnegie Medal for Excellence in
Nonfiction. Professor Blain's latest volume, Wake Up America: Black Women on the
Future of Democracy, was published by W.W. Norton in 2024. The volume brings
together the voices of major progressive Black women politicians, grassroots activists,
and intellectuals to offer critical insights on how we can create a more equitable
political future. Her next book, Without Fear: Black Women and the Making of
Human Rights, will be published by W.W. Norton in September 2025. The book offers
a sweeping history of human rights framed by the work and ideas of Black women in
the United States from the early nineteenth century to the present.