Dr Sarah Kenny FHEA

Dr Sarah Kenny

Department of History
Lecturer in Modern History and Distance Learning

Contact details

Email
s.kenny@bham.ac.uk
Twitter
Address
Department of History
University Âé¶¹¾«Ñ¡
Edgbaston
Birmingham
B15 2TT
UK

I am a social and cultural historian of modern Britain, with particular focus on histories of youth, gender, leisure, and urban redevelopment in post-war period.

Qualifications

  • PhD in History, University of Sheffield, 2017
  • MA in Modern History, University of Sheffield, 2014
  • BA (Hons) in History, University of Sheffield, 2012

Biography

I joined the University Âé¶¹¾«Ñ¡ following the submission of my PhD at the University of Sheffield in 2017. Since joining the History Department I have taught and supervised on a range of topics, with a particular focus on social histories of contemporary Britain.

Teaching

I teach on a range of undergraduate and taught postgraduate programmes at the University Âé¶¹¾«Ñ¡. Courses I have taught include:

  • The Young Ones: Youth, Popular Culture and Social Change in Modern Britain
  • Feminisms and the Women's Movement in Modern Britain: From Suffragists to Ladettes
  • Sites and Sources in Modern British Studies
  • A Holiday from Reality: A History of Drugs and Drug Use in Modern Britain
  • Research Methods
  • Practicing History (Approaches to History)
  • Public History
  • Dissertation Supervision

Research

My research considers the intersection between youth, consumerism, regulation, and the built environment. I explore these themes in my first monograph Growing Up and Going Out: Youth Culture, Commerce, and Leisure Space in Post-War Britain. The book, forthcoming with Manchester University Press, demonstrates the extent to which young people reshaped the post-war built environment in Britain, and argues that spatial movement is key to understanding the lived everyday. I have published on , and on . My work also considers consumption and popular culture, and I have work forthcoming on teenage magazines, adolescent sexuality, and the new morality of 1960s Britain. 

Increasingly, I am interested in the relationship between youth and intoxication. My second project, tentatively titled ‘From Teenybop to Alcopop? Youth, Alcohol, and Leisure in Contemporary Britain’, reframes youth drinking beyond the boundaries of policy and public health. It offers a timely reassessment of leisure that illuminates questions about sociability, legal and illicit consumption, and the state’s role in defining these categories.I am also developing articles on the history of alcohol regulation in post-war England and adolescent girls’ drinking in 1970s Scotland.

Publications

Books

  • Growing Up and Going Out: Youth Culture, Commerce, and Leisure Space in Post-War Britain (forthcoming with Manchester University Press)

Articles

Chapters

  • ‘The World of Conviviality’ in Brett Bebber (ed.), A Cultural History of Leisure in the Modern Age (Bloomsbury, forthcoming).
  • ‘Leisure, lifestyle and the construction of female sexuality in teenage magazines, c.1955–1970’ in The Subcultures Network (eds), Let’s Spend the Night Together: Sex, Pop Music and British Youth Culture, 1950s–80s. (Manchester University Press, forthcoming).

Selected Reviews

  • Review of F. Fuhg, London’s Working-Class Youth and the Making of Post-Victorian Britain, 1958–1971 (Palgrave, 2021), for Social History (forthcoming).
  • Review of C. Wildman, Urban Redevelopment and Modernity in Liverpool and Manchester, 1918-1939 (Bloomsbury, 2018), Women’s History Review 28.1 (2019), pp. 180-181.
  • Review of The Subcultures Network, Ripped, torn and cut: pop, politics and punk fanzines from 1976 (Manchester University Press, 2019), Contemporary British History 33:1 (2019), pp. 154-155.