Gale Family Foundation Fall 2024 Lecture with Samuel G. Freedman

Thu Sep 26 2024 at 07:00 pm to 08:30 pm

Texas Union | Austin

Schusterman Center for Jewish Studies
Publisher/HostSchusterman Center for Jewish Studies
Gale Family Foundation Fall 2024 Lecture with Samuel G. Freedman
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"Fighting Hatred in the Heartland: Hubert Humphrey's Battles Against Antisemitism & Extremism in Mid-Century America." by Samuel Freedman
About this Event

Located in the Texas Union Building (UNB) Quadrangle Room 3.304 Quadrangle Room, "Fighting Hatred in the Heartland: Hubert Humphrey's Battles Against Antisemitism and Extremism in Mid-Century Middle America." is the most recent in the Gale Lecture Series, hosted by the Schusterman Center for Jewish Studies. The Gale Chair Distinguished Lecture Series has been bringing renowned scholars of Jewish studies to speak at UT Austin since 1979.

There will be a reception preceding the event, beginning at 6:00 pm.
Those who register in advance are encouraged to come and enjoy the refreshments before the lecture.

Decades before Hubert Humphrey became a national hero as Lyndon Johnson's vital ally in pushing through landmark civil rights legislation, he was starting his public life as the mayor of Minneapolis. That city, though known today as a liberal stronghold, was in the 1940s one of the most racist and antisemitic cities in America. As its mayor, Humphrey took on both the bigoted extremists and their mainstream enablers, transforming Minneapolis into a national model of forward progress on human rights. His brave battles then lend historical perspective to the struggle for inclusive democracy that is still being waged today.

Samuel G. Freedman is an award-winning author, columnist, and professor. A former columnist for The New York Times and a professor at Columbia University, he is the author of the ten acclaimed books. The most recent of them, , won the 2024 Hillman Prize for Book Journalism, an award previously bestowed on such authors as John Hersey and Isabel Wilkerson. One of Freedman’s previous books, won the National Jewish Book Award for Non-Fiction in 2001. As a result of the book, Freedman was named one of the “Forward Fifty” most important American Jews in the year 2000 by the weekly Jewish newspaper The Forward.

A tenured professor at the Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism, Freedman was named the nation's outstanding journalism educator in 1997 by the Society of Professional Journalists. In 2012, he received Columbia University’s coveted Presidential Award for Outstanding Teaching. Freedman’s class in book-writing has developed more than 110 authors, editors, and agents, and it has been featured in Publishers Weekly and the Christian Science Monitor. He is a board member of the J. Anthony Lukas Book Awards and member of the Journalism Advisory Council of Religion News Service and the faculty advisory board of the Center for Journalism Ethics. He has spoken at the Smithsonian Institution, Yale University, and UCLA, among other venues, and has appeared on National Public Radio, CNN, and the PBS News Hour.

Freedman holds a bachelor’s degree in journalism and history from the University of Wisconsin-Madison, which he received in May 1977. He lives in New York with his wife, Christia Chana Blomquist.


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Event Venue & Nearby Stays

Texas Union, 2308 Whitis Avenue, Austin, United States

Tickets

USD 0.00

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