Joseph Darda

he/him

darda@msu.edu
517-884-4418

C606 Wells Hall
619 Red Cedar Rd
East Lansing, MI 48824

FacultyEnglish

Associate Professor
Literary Studies; Popular Culture; Race and Ethnic Studies

Curriculum Vitae

Biography

Joseph Darda is an associate professor of English at Michigan State University and a historian of American culture, sports, and racial formation.

His most recent book, Gift and Grit: Race, Sports, and the Construction of Social Debt (Cambridge University Press, 2025), investigates how the sports industry has incubated ideas about race, gender, and advantage since civil rights.

His previous books include The Strange Career of Racial Liberalism (Stanford University Press, 2022), How White Men Won the Culture Wars: A History of Veteran America (University of California Press, 2021), and Empire of Defense: Race and the Cultural Politics of Permanent War (University of Chicago Press, 2019). CHOICE named How White Men Won the Culture Wars an Outstanding Academic Title for 2022, and the New Republic called it “original and persuasive” and “a wide-ranging and provocative tour through the post-Vietnam cultural and political scene.”

Darda is currently developing a group biography tentatively titled “Athletic Revolutionaries: Jack Scott and the Jocks Who Brought the Left to the Locker Room.” He is also editing a volume on running culture in the United States titled “Distance: On Running, and Not Running, in America,” which is under advance contract with the University of Washington Press.

He has published articles in American Literary HistoryAmerican LiteratureAmerican Quarterly, and Critical Inquiry, among other journals, and contributed essays to the Los Angeles Review of Books. With the historian Amira Rose Davis, he coedited a 2023 special issue of American Quarterly titled “The Body Issue: Sports and the Politics of Embodiment.” He has since joined the journal’s Board of Managing Editors.

He has held year-long fellowships at the University of Connecticut Humanities Institute and the University of California, Irvine.

At MSU, Darda coordinates the Literary Studies Now speaker series, which brings leading literary scholars to campus to address the state of the discipline and share how they’re practicing it now.

He lives in East Lansing with his partner, Samantha Gailey, a scholar of environmental health, and Ernest Hemingway, a dog.

Publications

Gift and Grit: Race, Sports, and the Construction of Social Debt. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2025.

The Strange Career of Racial Liberalism. Post•45. Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press, 2022.

How White Men Won the Culture Wars: A History of Veteran America. Berkeley: University of California Press, 2021.

Empire of Defense: Race and the Cultural Politics of Permanent War. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2019.

Editor with Amira Rose Davis. “The Body Issue: Sports and the Politics of Embodiment.” Special issue, American Quarterly 75, no. 3 (2023).

Courses

ENG 826: Special Topics Seminar
“Critical University Studies”

ENG 818: Studies in Genre and Media
“The Public Humanities”

ENG 323: Readings in Nonfiction/JRN 492: Journalism Special Topics
“Joan Didion and the New Journalism”

ENG 320A: Methodologies of Literary History: Genre
“The Campus Novel”

ENG 320D: Methodologies of Literary History: History and Theory of Creative Writing
“Literary Institutions”

ENG 210: Introduction to Literary Studies
“The Literary Prize”

IAH 207: Literatures, Cultures, Identities
“The Sporting Public”