Department of History|Loyola University Chicago

Department of History

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Christopher E. Manning

Christopher E. Manning
Title: Associate Professor & Undergraduate Director 
Office: Crown Center 539 
Phone: 773.508.3081 
E-mail: cmannin@luc.edu 


Personal Information

Degree:

Ph.D. Northwestern University, 2003

Specialization:

20th Century American

Research Interests:

African-American Political and Civial Rights Activism

Black Chicago


Chicago Politics and Civil Rights Activism
 
Ethnicity in Chicago

Publications:

 

“Congressman Arthur Mitchell” in MacMillan’s Encyclopedia of the Great Depression (MacMillan Reference USA, 2003)

 

"African-Americans in Chicago" in the Newberry Library's Encyclopedia of Chicago. (University of Chicago Press, 2004)

 

Black Legislators in the Encyclopedia of the Great Black Migration. (Greenwood Press, 2006)

 

Black Mayors in the Encyclopedia of the Great Black Migration. (Greenwood Press, 2006)

 

William L. Dawson in the Encyclopedia of the Great Black Migration (Greenwood Press, 2006)

 

Oscar DePriest in the Encyclopedia of the Great Black Migration. (Greenwood Press, 2006)

 

“Perspectives on the Great Migration and Black Chicago,” Journal of the Illinois State Historical Society, Volume 100, No. 4 Winter 2007-2008.  This review essay covers six Chicago history, including Passionately Human, No Less Divine by Wallace Best; Earl B. Dickerson: A Voice For Freedom and Equality by Robert Blakely; Black Writing From Chicago: In the World, Not of It? edited by Richard R. Guzman; The Chicago Renaissance and Women’s Activism by Anne Meis Knupfer; Waiting for Gautreaux: A Story of Segregation, Housing and the Black Ghetto by Alexander Polikoff; and Chicago Blues: Portraits and Stories by David Whiteis

 

“God Didn’t Curse Me When He Made Me Black,” Journal of Illinois History, State Historical Society, Fall 2009

 

 “The Legacy of Bronzeville,” Journal of the Illinois State Historical Society, Fall 2009.  This review essay cover six works in Chicago history, including Adam Green’s  Selling the Race: Culture, Community, and Black Chicago, 1940-1960; Clovis Semmes’s The Regal Theater and Black Culture; Davarian L. Baldwin’s Chicago’s New Negroes: Modernity, the Great Migration, and Black Urban Life; Paul Street’s Racial Oppression in the Global Metropolis; Timmuel D. Black, Jr.’s  Bridges of Memory Volume 2: Chicago’s Second Generation of Black Migration

 

The Ties That Bind: William L. Dawson and the Limits of Black Electoral Leadership in the Twentieth Century (Northern Illinois University Press, 2009)

PANELS

 

Panelist for the Winter 2002 Northwestern University Graduate School Beyond Books Series, "The Price of the Ticket: Professional Socialization Issues for the Minority Academic."

 

Panelist on the Harold Washington mayoralty in the Chicago Historical Society’s series, “Power and Promise: Chicago’s Mayors,” April 5, 2005.

 

Panelist on “Without Sanctuary: Racism Then and There, Here and Now,” at First United Methodist Church of Chicago, July 14, 2005. 

 

Panelist on “Challenges Confronting Faculty of Color in Institutions of Higher Learning,” at Loyola University for the DFI Fellows Meeting, January 17, 2006.

 

Panelist on “Succeeding at a College or University as a Minority Student” for Project Upward Bound at Loyola University, January 27, 2006.

 

Panelist on “Chicagoans in Conflict” Chicago Humanities Festival, Chicago, Illinois, November 12, 2006.

 

Panelist on “Preparation for the Job Market” at Loyola University for the Graduate School, March 29, 2007.

 

Panelist for the Global Studies Forum “Who Owns the Black Vote,” at Benedictine University, Lisle, Illinois, February 21, 2008 

INTERVIEWS AND COMMENTARY

 

Interview and commentary for “Paper Trail: 100 years of the Chicago Defender”which aired on Channel 11, WTTW11 Wednesday, June 22, 2005.

 

Interview and commentary on the “Chicago Hydrant Riots of 1966” Eight Forty-Eight, WBEZ, National Public Radio, Chicago, Illinois, July 13, 2006.

 

Interview and commentary on the Election of President Barack Obama, CLTV Chicago, January 24, 2009.

 

Interviewed regarding William L. Dawson and the Limits of Black Electoral Power on the John Rothman Show, July 12, 2009.

CURRENT RESEARCH

N.O.L.A: An Oral History of the Hurricane Katrina Volunteers

Faculty Office Hours

Department of History
Loyola University Chicago · 1032 W. Sheridan Road, Chicago, IL 60660 · Crown Center, 5th Floor
Phone: 773.508.2221 · Fax: 773.508.2153

Notice of Non-discriminatory Policy