Robin D. Muhammad

Dr. Robin Mohammed, portrait
Associate Professor of African American Studies
Bentley Annex 315, Athens Campus

Dr. Robin Muhammad is on Faculty Fellowship Leave for academic year 2023-24.

News

Robin Muhammad in OHIO News

Forum Archives

Education

Ph.D. in History from Carnegie Mellon University

M.S. in History and Social Policy from Carnegie Mellon University

B.A. in History and Spanish from the University of California at Davis

Research Interests

As a labor historian, I study workers, their communities and their political institutions. My current research focuses on the history of industrial workers of African descent. My book manuscript, Arsenal of Liberation, is a study of the African American experience in 20th-century California. By focusing on changes in the shipbuilding industry in northern California and the growing African American community, I am able to trace the challenges and limitations of liberal coalitions, technological innovation and federal policy.

Courses Taught

  • AAS 1060 Introduction to African American Studies
  • AAS 1010 African American History I
  • AAS 2020 African American History II
  • AAS 2200 Introduction to Black Political Economy
  • AAS 2250 History of the Black Worker
  • AAS 3680 African American Political Thought
  • AAS 369E The Black Press in North America

Publications

Arsenal of Liberation: African American Workers and Shipbuilding in the San Francisco Bay Area (book manuscript) Forthcoming

African American History: Volume I (2012) and II (in press) University Readers. Forthcoming

"Garveyism Looks Toward the Pacific," Perspectives journal online (www.BlackPast.org)

The Encyclopedia of American Populism ABC-CLIO. Entries: Western Alliances and the Colored Farmers' Alliance. Forthcoming

The Encyclopedia of African American History Facts On File. Entries: The Double V Campaign and the March on Washington Movement

Book review: James Pritchard, A Bridge of Ships: Canadian Shipbuilding duringthe Second World War (Kingston: McGill-Queen's University Press, 2011), in Labour/Le Travail (forthcoming issue)
Women in American History: An Encyclopedia. Hasia Diner (ed.). Entry: Black women's clubs
Sociology of Work: An Encyclopedia. SAGE Publication. Entrie: Military; Unskilled work. Forthcoming

"Separate and Unsanitary: African American Women Car Cleaners and the Women's Service Section, 1918-1920," Journal of Women's History 23:2 (Summer 2011)

"Linking Up the Golden Gate: Garveyism in the San Francisco Bay Area, 1915-1925," Journal of Black Studies (November 2008).
Book review: Peter La Chapelle, Proud to Be an Okie: Cultural Politics, Country Music, and Migration to Southern California (Berkeley: University of California Press, 2007), in Labor: Studies in Working-Class History of the Americas 5:2 (Summer 2008), 144-146

Encyclopedia of the Homefront: World I and II published by ABC-CLIO (2006) Contributor of eight entries involving the African American experience.

Selected Grants Awards

Special 1804 Library Endowment - Ohio University, 2007.Arts and Humanities Junior Faculty Endowment - Ohio University, 2007.Goldman Award for Excellence in Graduate Teaching 2004. Carnegie Mellon University.Carnegie Scholar, 1996-2000. Carnegie Mellon University.

Selected University Service

Co-chair, MLK Celebration Committee, 2013

Member, University Curriculum Council

Member, Advisory Board for Global Studies Program

Member, Black Alumni Reunion Advisory Committee