Erik Gellman

Erik
Gellman
Department of History
Roosevelt University
P 312-322-7138
Where
430 S Michigan Ave AUD 724
Chicago, IL, 60605-1313
See map: Google Maps

Race Tracks: Civil Rights and the Arena of Public Transit

Erik Gellman will present five myths of late 1960s Chicago history. These myths show how popular memory (and the lack of memory altogether) have prevented students and citizens of Illinois from better understanding our contemporary urban problems around issues like access to jobs, the pipeline from failing schools to prisons, and the use of urban space. By using film footage and images, along with Gellman’s extensive research on Chicago civil rights activities during this period, Erik Gellman illustrates a much more relevant urban history of the late 1960s. This talk addresses touchstones like the campaign of Martin Luther King, the Democratic Convention of 1968, and the assassination of Fred Hampton as points of departure to understand the context of social change and its repression during this tumultuous era. 

Erik Gellman, a professor in the History and Philosophy Department at Roosevelt University, holds a B.A. from Bates College and Ph.D. in History from Northwestern University. Specializing in the 19th and 20th Century United States, Gellman's research interests include African American and working-class history, social movements, and comparative ethnic and racial studies. He is the author of recent articles in the Journal of Southern History and Labor and is currently working on two forthcoming books, Labor's New Deal Prophets and Death Blow, Jim Crow!