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Dr Joe Street

Associate Professor

Department: Northumbria School of Design, Arts and Creative Industries

Joe Street was educated at Sheffield University between 1996 and 2004. He joined Northumbria in 2009 after stints in the History Departments at Sheffield University and the University of Kent. An enthusiastic but sadly limited footballer who specialised in pointing and shouting, Joe was forced to end his anonymous playing career in 2012 due to injury, an event that was met with universal indifference. He spends a lot of time watching the mighty .

Between 2013 and 2019 Joe sat on the Executive Committee of the British Association for American Studies, chairing its Publications Committee between 2016 and the end of his term. Alongside Professor Martin Halliwell, he is a Series Editor of Edinburgh University Press's series. He is a member of Historians of the Twentieth-Century United States and a Senior Fellow of the Higher Education Academy. Between 2010 and 2015 he was Programme Leader for History. He also serves as the UCU representative for History staff and is Vice Chair of Northumbria's UCU branch.

He teaches across History, American Studies, and Film at Northumbria, including modules on the San Francisco Bay Area, the American 1960s, the Black Panther Party, and the relationship between History and popular film. For more information on Joe's research interests, please see the Research Themes and Scholarly Interests tab.

Campus Address

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Lipman 329, City Campus
Newcastle upon Tyne
NE1 8ST

Joe is an interdisciplinary scholar whose work considers the intersections between race, politics, popular culture, and physical space in the late twentieth century, with a particular focus on the San Francisco Bay Area between the 1960s and the 2010s. His work has analysed African American radicalism, Silicon Valley ideology, and Bay Area literature, cinema, and popular culture. He is currently thinking about the relationship between public space and racial politics in the Bay Area. The first fruits of this project appeared as in Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep?, one of the most famous works of the great science fiction writer and Bay Area native, Philip K. Dick.

This long-term project follows the publication of two major monographs. was published by the University of Georgia Press in 2024. A major reinterpretation of the BPP, Black Revolutionaries emerged from Joe's long-standing interest in African American radicalism and follows the publication of a series of scholarly articles that included Joe's evaluation of the historiography of the BPP, the impact of prison and solitary confinement on the BPP founder Huey P. Newton, and the BPP’s campaign to free Newton. A year earlier, Joe published an interdisciplinary study of Hollywood's representation of Silicon Valley. (Edinburgh University Press, 2023) uncovers how a series of supposedly unconnected films such as Venom, The Social Network, and The Internship articulate Hollywood fears about the potential for Silicon Valley corporations to redefine and dominate our world.

Joe has also published work on the representation of San Francisco in Clint Eastwood’s 1971 movie, Dirty Harry. This was expanded into (University Press of Florida, 2016), a study of the relationship between the Dirty Harry series and conservative politics in the 1970s and 1980s, which highlights the parallels between the political message of the movies and the political rhetoric of conservative leaders such as Ronald Reagan. Described as 'the last word on Dirty Harry' it is an ideal present for the Eastwood fan in your life.

Earlier in his career, Joe was one of a number of British scholars who reconsidered the influence of the African American struggle on racial politics in the UK during the 1960s. He published groundbreaking evaluations of Malcolm X’s impact on racial politics in the West Midlands and the significance of African American soul music on British youth in the 1960s. This led to further study of Dave Godin, a legendary figure in the British soul scene. 

Delving further back in time, Joe’s first monograph, (University Press of Florida, 2007) revealed the impact of cultural forms such as theater and music on the African American civil rights movement during the 1960s. From the singing workshops of the Highlander Folk School to the Black Panther Party’s Ministry for Culture it argued that ‘cultural organizing’ was central to the civil right movement’s operation.

  • History PhD June 30 2004
  • Senior Fellow (SFHEA) Higher Education Academy (HEA) 2015


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