february, 2021
25feb12:00 pm12:45 pmVirtual EventShowcase - An Interview with Lee Weiner of the Chicago Seven
Time
(Thursday) 12:00 pm - 12:45 pm
Event Video
Event Details
Ann Morrison interview Lee Weiner on protest, policing, and his experiences as one of the famed Chicago Seven. Lee Weiner was born and raised on Chicago’s South Side, in
Event Details
Ann Morrison interview Lee Weiner on protest, policing, and his experiences as one of the famed Chicago Seven.
Lee Weiner was born and raised on Chicago’s South Side, in a family with leftist political roots and an association with organized crime. His activist life began with free speech demonstrations at the University of Illinois in 1960, including community organizing in desperately poor neighborhoods in Chicago. Friendships with other left and counterculture activists, and participation in the anti-war demonstrations in the summer of 1968 in Chicago, led to his indictment in the notorious Chicago 8/7 Conspiracy trial in 1969.
His later political work included direct response fundraising for members of Congress and national non-profit organizations. Along the way, he collected a couple of master’s degrees and a Ph.D. in sociology. His political memoir “Conspiracy to Riot – The Life and Times of One of the Chicago 7” was published in August, and along with a recent movie, mentioned a bit in the media. If, for whatever reasons, you’re interested in more info, check out “Lee Weiner” in Wikipedia (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lee_Weiner).
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Speakers for this event
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Ann Morrison
Ann Morrison
Ann Morrison is a former editor for Time Inc. magazines in New York (Fortune), Hong Kong (Asiasweek) and London (Time). She has also taught journalism in the Global Business Journalism Program at Tsinghua University in Beijing and at Sciences-Po in Paris. She is an advisory board member of the American Library in Paris and continues to freelance for various publications.
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Lee Weiner
Lee Weiner
Lee Weiner was born and raised on Chicago’s South Side, in a family with leftist political roots and an association with organized crime. His activist life began with free speech demonstrations at the University of Illinois in 1960, included community organizing in desperately poor neighborhoods in Chicago. Friendships with other left and counterculture activists, and participation in the anti-war demonstrations in the summer of 1968 in Chicago, led to his indictment in the notorious Chicago 8/7 Conspiracy trial in 1969. His later political work included direct response fundraising for members of Congress and national non-profit organizations. Along the way he collected a couple of master’s degrees and a PhD in sociology. His political memoir Conspiracy to Riot – The Life and Times of One of the Chicago 7 was published in August 2020, and along with a recent movie, mentioned a bit in the media.