Profiles

Jeffrey McCune, Jr.
Frederick Douglass Professor
- Rochester NY UNITED STATES
- Morey Hall Morey Hall
- Frederick Douglass Institute
McCune is founding chair of the Department of Black Studies, and an expert on matters of race, gender, and equality.
Areas of Expertise
Media
Social
Links
Biography
Jeffrey McCune Jr., an award-winning scholar on issues of race, gender, and identity, is the director of the University of Rochester's Frederick Douglass Institute and chair of the Department of Black Studies.
McCune has a bachelor’s degree in speech/theater and secondary education from Cornell College and a master’s degree in communications studies from the University of Nebraska–Lincoln. He earned his PhD in performance studies, with a focus on African American and gender studies, from Northwestern University. Before coming to Rochester, he served eight years as associate professor of women, gender, and sexuality studies and of African and African American studies at Washington University in St. Louis. He’s the author of Sexual Discretion: Black Masculinity and the Politics of Passing (University of Chicago Press, 2014).
At Washington University, McCune enjoyed a reputation as an engaging and stimulating professor. His sought-after course on Kanye West—“a case study for interrogating the interplay between fame, gender, sexuality, and race”—made a USA Today list of “11 college courses in pop culture we wish we could take” in 2017.
Education
Northwestern University
Phd
Performance Studies with a focus on African American Studies; Gender Studies
2007
University of Nebraska-Lincoln
MA
Communication Studies
2001
Selected Media Appearances

The Rise of the Noodle Boys
New York Times print
2024-12-16
As an era of macho politics sets in, sinewy stars like Timothée Chalamet, Dominic Sessa and Mark Eydelshteyn embody a slinky alternative image of white masculinity in American pop culture.

Is it time to stop saying 'aloha' and other culturally sensitive words out of context?
USA Today
2023-01-13
Everyone needs context before speaking another culture's languages besides their own. "We have a responsibility to be somewhat judicious with our language, and to have care for what we do with language," says Jeffrey McCune, director of the Frederick Douglass Institute of African & African-American Studies at the University of Rochester.

UR establishes Department of Black Studies
Rochester Business Journal print
2022-11-16
Jeffrey McCune Jr., the institute’s director, said a dedicated department will be able to develop curriculum and programming in a way that will be best suited for students.

Amid controversies, one college professor says there’s value in teaching students about Kanye West
NBC News online
2022-10-20
Jeffrey McCune Jr. taught The Politics of Kanye West in 2017 at Washington University in St. Louis, and now he plans to launch a similar course on the rapper focusing on the relationship between white evangelical Christianity and anti-Blackness.

Jeffrey McCune tasked with starting new UR Black Studies Dept.
WROC-TV tv
2022-02-03
Jeffrey McCune, Jr., who was brought in as the director of the University of Rochester’s Frederick Douglass Institute for African and African-American Studies, is focussed on turning that program into a full-fledged department.
Selected Articles
https://muse.jhu.edu/article/720796
American Quarterly
Jeffrey Q. McCune Jr. and Jordan Mulkey
2019-03-01
Jeffrey McCune, Jr. and Jordan Mulkey discuss how to move blackness from an object of convenience to one of full-time dissent.
Meditation - “Ultralight Beam”: The Gospel According to Kanye West
Journal of Hip Hop Studies
Jeffrey McCune
2019-08-24
Jeffrey McCune discusses a drift which produces division and decay.