Keidrick Roy teaches courses on the history of American political thought and researches the evolution of core concepts, including the Enlightenment, liberalism, nationalism, and conservatism. His interdisciplinary scholarship foregrounds African American intellectual traditions in rethinking contemporary debates over patriotism, religion, race, and civic optimism. His award-winning first book, American Dark Age (Princeton University Press, 2024), explores enduring medievalisms that haunt U.S. liberal democratic ideals, and his next monograph reevaluates the Enlightenment in relation to Black political thought.
Professor Roy's scholarly essays appear in Modern Intellectual History, New Literary History, English Literary History, and American Political Thought. His public history writing appears in America: The Atlas, published in 2023 by Smithsonian Books & Thunder Bay Press (Dutch translation forthcoming in 2026). Additionally, his public service and scholarship have been featured by outlets such as CBS Sunday Morning, Salon.com, the National Football League, and HBO.
Professor Roy earned his Ph.D. in American Studies from Harvard University and was elected to the Harvard Society of Fellows. His dissertation, "Jefferson's Map, Douglass's Territory: The Black Reconstruction of Enlightenment in America, 1773-1865," won Harvard's DeLancey K. Jay Prize for the best work across the University "upon any subject relating to the history or development of constitutional government and free institutions in the United States or Great Britain or any other part of the English-speaking world at any period of history." It also won Harvard's Helen Choate Bell Prize for best dissertation on any subject in American literature.
Additionally, Professor Roy has been dedicated to the work of museum curation and documentary film production to encourage public reflection and dialogue. At the American Writers Museum in Chicago, he was the lead curator for Dark Testament, an exhibition that put the writings of African Americans from the Civil War to the Civil Rights Movement in conversation with contemporary Black writers and thinkers. He has also served as an exhibition curator for Frederick Douglass's writings and speeches. At Harvard University's Houghton Library, Keidrick curated an exhibition on the Nazi racial state, which debuted in 2022. In addition, he is the executive producer of We Are Here Too, a documentary film on race and art in the wake of the coronavirus pandemic, which is featured in the 2023 SR: Socially Relevant Film Festival in New York City.
An Outstanding Academy Educator honoree as a former Instructor of English at the United States Air Force Academy, an award-winning Teaching Fellow at Harvard, and a former military nuclear operations officer, Keidrick has received research support from the Ford Foundation, Andrew W. Mellon Foundation, Pat Tillman Foundation, and Harvard's Center for American Political Studies. He also served as a Faculty Associate at Harvard's Edmond J. Safra Center for Ethics.