Professor McGinley researches and writes about theater and performance in the U.S., mostly of the last hundred years. Her written works, both published and in-process, document and highlight the contributions of Black performing artists, among them musicians, actors, and playwrights, and underscore the centrality of Black cultural production to American theater and popular entertainment more generally. Her first book, the award-winning Staging the Blues: From Tent Shows to Tourism (Duke University Press) offers an interdisciplinary account of blues’ roots in theatrical performance and popular entertainment, and the enduring presence of theatrical techniques in later-twentieth-century blues. McGinley’s work also explores the ways the racial logics and hierarchies in the U.S. have been constituted and contested through embodied performances in and of everyday life. Such questions are at the center of her book-in-progress, Rehearsing Civil Rights, an in-depth examination of an ethos and culture of rehearsal embedded within the Black freedom struggle in the form of improvisational exercises, role-playing scenarios, and large-scale simulations from the early 1930s to the late 1960s.