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Casidy Campbell

Postdoctoral Fellow

Research Interests:

Black Studies
Black Girlhood
Life Stories
Oral History
Sexuality
Digital Studies
Pleasure
Subjectivity and Geography
Social Media (Movements)
Digital Technology and Representation 

About:

Casidy B. Campbell's work is focused on the fullness of black girls’ personhood and seeks to honor the life of unnamed, unknown, overlooked black girls in the late twentieth and early twenty-first centuries who only come to have political significance in death. Using oral history and other methods, her dissertation works to fill in archival gaps piecing together all possible forms of source material including compressed, or seemingly incomplete, digital traces in order to assemble their “emotional inner worlds,” as well as their ordinary, daily lives and technological agency which are flattened in service of broader political agendas. Her research reveals how 1) the dynamic between political organizing and digital technology reveal the structural constraints of technology as a justice seeking tool, and 2) how black girls use the same digital technologies that often efface them to assert their quotidian perspectives. She is a contributor to the recently published Global History of Black Girlhood edited by LaKisha Simmons and Corinne Fields, current member of the Digital Inequality Lab, and a former 2021 Community of Scholars Fellow at the Institute of Research on Women and Gender and DISCO (Digital Inquiry, Speculation, Collaboration, and Optimism) Network Graduate Scholar. 

Campbell earned her doctorate in American Culture at the University of Michigan-Ann Arbor in 2023. She is from Brooklyn, NY.