2010-2011 Speakers


Eugene Robinson


Washington Post columnist and MSNBC regular

November 10, 2010
7 p.m.

Sponsored by Indianapolis Recorder


 In a 25-year career at The Washington Post, Robinson has been city hall reporter, city editor, foreign correspondent in Buenos Aires and London, foreign editor and assistant managing editor in charge of the paper’s award winning Style section. He has written books about race in Brazil and music in Cuba, covered a heavyweight championship fight, witnessed riots in Philadelphia and a murder trial in the deepest Amazon, and sat with Presidents and Dictators and the Queen of England.

Robinson is frequently seen on MSNBC with Chris Matthews, Keith Olbermann and Rachel Maddow. Robinson was born and raised in Orangeburg, SC. He remembers the culminating years of the Civil Rights Movement—the “Orangeburg Massacre,” a 1968 incident in which police fired on students protesting a segregated bowling alley and killed three unarmed young men, took place within sight of his house just a few hundred yards away. He was educated at Orangeburg High School, where he was one of a handful of black students on the previously all white campus; and the University of Michigan, where during his senior year he was the first black student to be named co-editor-in-chief of the award-winning student newspaper, The Michigan Daily.

He began his journalism career at the San Francisco Chronicle, where he was one of two reporters assigned to cover the trial of kidnapped newspaper heiress Patricia Hearst which arguably set the pattern for all the saturation-coverage celebrity trials that have followed. He was named The Post’s South America correspondent, based in Buenos Aires, Argentina, which allowed him to research his first book, “Coal to Cream: A Black Man’s Journey Beyond Color to an Affirmation of Race,” published in 1999. For the subsequent two years, he was London bureau chief before returning to Washington to become The Post’s foreign editor in 1994. That same year he was elected to the Council of Foreign Relations.

Robinson is a member of the National Association of Black Journalists and has received numerous journalism awards. His second book, “Last Dance in Havana: The Final Days of Fidel and the Start of the New Cuban Revolution”—an examination of contemporary Cuba, looking at the society through the vibrant music scene—was published in 2004. His latest book, “Disintegration,” is scheduled for release in 2010.

 


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