Steven M. Gillon is a scholar-in-residence for the History Channel and a professor of history at the University of Oklahoma. The author of several books on American history, he lives in Miami Beach.
"Separate and Unequal is an enormously impressive book. Steven
Gillon tells a compellingly granular story about the so-called
Kerner Commission's inner workings in 1967-1968.... And he employs
his formidable story-telling skills to draw out the lasting
historical consequences."--David M. Kennedy, Donald J. McLachlan
Professor of History Emeritus, Stanford University
"[A] compelling new history of the commission.... The Kerner
Commission was right about race in America, but its very ambitions
enabled the backlash against much of what it hoped to
achieve."--Washington Post
"Boldly written...The hard lesson being driven home by Gillon is
that race relations and preservation of social decency are
extraordinarily complex problems. They lack simple and immediate
reconciliation. The conundrum has only grown since the Kerner
Commission."--New York Journal of Books
"Gillon's research about the Kerner Commission, bolstered by hours
of interviews with the surviving members, is extremely
well-documented and also offers the feel of being ripped from
today's headlines.... Well-rendered popular American history that
also speaks to present-day issues."--Kirkus Reviews
"Gillon's thought-provoking look into the Kerner Commission
provides great insight into race issues of 1960s
America."--Publishers Weekly
"How did a government document that black radicals anticipated
would be a whitewash end up instead denouncing 'white racism'? This
improbable turn of events animates Steven M. Gillon's deft,
incisive, and altogether absorbing history of the Kerner
Commission, which he convincingly depicts as 'the last gasp of
1960s liberalism'...Meticulous."--Atlantic
"In our toxic and dispiriting time, Separate and Unequal is an
important reminder that social and racial progress is uneven and
subject to setbacks like the one suffered after the release of the
Kerner Report. But Steven Gillon's surprising story of dogged
liberal politicians and journalists also shows that well-framed
social arguments can change the debate forever." --Jonathan Alter,
author of The Center Holds: Obama and His Enemiesspan
"In Separate and Unequal, Steven M. Gillon...tells the fraught
story of the commission, its recommendations and American race
relations in the five decades since. His book is sophisticated,
fair-minded-and a bracing corrective to complacency about racial
reconciliation in America."--Wall Street Journal
"Racism remains a deeply troubling aspect of American history and
culture, and Gillon's...excellent history of the 1967-68 National
Advisory Commission on Civil Disorders, more popularly known as the
Kerner Commission, provides historical insight on today's political
climate...Exceptionally well-researched and timely."--Library
Journal (starred review)
"Steven Gillon captures both the promise still viable in 1968 as
well as the emergence of the 'post-civil rights'racial and
political order that dominates American life today. It is a timely
and essential book." --Patricia Sullivan, author of Lift Every
Voice and professor of history, University of South Carolina
"Steven Gillon delivers a riveting read about a devastating
challenge to the confident liberalism of the sixties.... This
fascinating book illuminates both the 1960s and our own
times."--Laura Kalman, professor of history, University of
California, Santa Barbara
"Steven Gillon's timely book, Separate and Unequal, is a compelling
reminder that America remains a racially divided country.... Every
lawmaker and every fair-minded citizen should read Gillon's
history."--Robert Dallek
"When the African American freedom struggle moved north, the Great
Society coalition fell apart. Fifty years on, Steven Gillon
reconstructs that dramatic story with his trademark brio and deep
research, chronicling both the immediate and the enduring political
consequences."--Gareth Davies, Associate Professor of American
History, Oxford University
"While solutions to poverty and discrimination are far from the
national political agenda, the history of the Kerner Report reminds
us that liberals and the left can still influence policy from the
margins."--Nation
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