Contact Information
Biography Information
Andrew W. Kahrl is an assistant professor of history at Marquette University. He received his Ph.D. in history from Indiana University in 2008. Andrew has received fellowships and support from the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation and American Council of Learned Societies, the Louisiana Endowment for the Humanities, the North Caroliniana Society, the Southern Historical Collection at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, the Institute for Southern Studies at the University of South Carolina, and the John Hope Franklin Research Center at Duke University, and is the recipient of 2007 Louis Pelzer Memorial Award from the Organization of American Historians. Articles based on his research have been published in the Journal of American History and the Journal of Social History. He and his wife, Aileen, live in Milwaukee, Wisconsin.
Project Description
My research focuses on the social, legal, and environmental history of beaches, coastal property, and waterfront real estate development in the twentieth-century United States. I am particularly interested in examining how coastal areas both reflect and constitute relations of power, and in tracing the relationship between human and environmental exploitation. I am currently completing work on a history of African American beaches and the rise of “coastal capitalism” in the twentieth-century American South. This book follows the histories of African American beachfront properties located on the Chesapeake, Atlantic, and Gulf coasts from the age of Jim Crow to the modern Sunbelt era, and compares blacks’ struggles to acquire and develop coastal properties for pleasure, relief, and profit, to changes in the economic and cultural value of beaches and beachfront property from the turn-of-the-twentieth century to the present. It examines the cultural and structural forces that contributed to the meteoric rise of coastal property values and development, the privatization of America’s shores, the degradation of coastal ecologies, and the erosion of black-owned coastal property over the past quarter-century, and unpacks the public policies and legal strategies that constitute modern coastal capitalism.
