Subscribe to Unsung History so you never miss an episode!

Ava Purkiss

Ava Purkiss Profile Photo

Ava Purkiss’ research and teaching interests lie at the intersection of race, gender, health, and the body. Her book, Fit Citizens: A History of Black Women’s Exercise from Post-Reconstruction to Postwar America (University of North Carolina Press, 2023), explores how African American women used physical exercise to express both literal and figurative fitness for citizenship. Her work places Black women squarely within the history of American fitness culture and challenges assumptions about Black women’s mobility, physicality, and corporality. Purkiss is at work on a second research project on race and gynecology in the twentieth century.

Purkiss earned her Ph.D. in history from the University of Texas at Austin and has received fellowships and grants from the National Endowment for the Humanities, the American Council of Learned Societies, the Carter G. Woodson Institute for African-American and African Studies at the University of Virginia, the American Association of University Women, and the Institute for the Humanities at the University of Michigan. She is the recipient of the 2017 Organization of American Historians Lerner-Scott Prize for best dissertation in U.S. women’s history and the 2018 Letitia Woods Brown prize for best article in African American women’s history from the Association of Black Women Historians.

Research Areas: race, gender, and health; Black women’s history; African American history; modern American history; fitness culture; history of medicine; reproductive justice

Signature Courses: Black Feminist Approaches to Health; Skin Deep: Race and Beauty in American Culture; Race, Gender, Recreation, and Sport in Twentieth-Century America

Affiliations: Professor Purkiss holds a joint appointment in the LSA Departments of Women’s and Gender Studies (WGS) and American Culture (AC), and by courtesy in the Michigan Medicine Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology.

July 24, 2023

History of Black Women & Physical Fitness in the United States

In 1894, Mary P. Evans, wrote in the Woman’s Era , a Black women’s magazine, that exercise: “enables you to keep in the best condition for work with the hands or with the brain… It prepares you to meet disappointment, sorrow…
Guest: Ava Purkiss