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Robert J. Norrell

Biography

Robert J. Norrell

Professor Norrell has held the Bernadotte Schmitt Chair of Excellence since 1998. He writes mainly about American race relations. In 2015, Norrell published ALEX HALEY AND THE BOOKS THAT CHANGED A NATION, which covers the rise to national celebrity and great literary influence of Haley. In 2009 his revisionist biography, UP FROM HISTORY: the Life of Booker T. Washington, appeared to some acclaim. In 2005 he published a well-reviewed interpretive synthesis of race relations in the twentieth-century United States, THE HOUSE I LIVE IN: Race in the American Century. His book REAPING THE WHIRLWIND: The Civil Rights Movement in Tuskegee won the Robert F. Kennedy Book Award in 1986. He has published ten other books on the history of the American South. He is the author of 25 scholarly articles. He has given invited lectures at Heidelberg Oxford University, the University of Cambridge, the University of North Carolina, and the University of Tübingen, and several other universities.

Professor Norrell teaches graduate and undergraduate courses in southern history and graduate courses in recent United States history. He has directed doctoral dissertations on education reform, environmental history, black religion, southern economic history, race relations in housing and modern southern political history. His numerous masters students have worked on topics in race relations and southern history. His students are now employed at various universities and high schools around the United States.

Robert J. Norrell

Books by Robert J. Norrell

by Robert J. Norrell - African American Interest, Biography, Nonfiction

It is difficult to think of two 20th-century books by one author that have had as much influence on American culture when they were published as Alex Haley's monumental bestsellers, THE AUTOBIOGRAPHY OF MALCOLM X (1965), and ROOTS (1976). They changed the way white and black America viewed each other and the country's history. This first biography of Haley follows him from his childhood in relative privilege in deeply segregated small town Tennessee to fame and fortune in high powered New York City. This deeply researched and compelling book by Robert J. Norrell offers the perfect opportunity to revisit his authorship, his career as one of the first African American star journalists, as well as an especially dramatic time of change in American history.