
Roger Wilkins
Clarence J. Robinson Professor of History and American Culture
Past chairman of the Pulitzer Prize Board, Roger Wilkins came
to George Mason with broad experience in public affairs. During the Johnson
administration, Wilkins
served as assistant attorney general. In a distinguished
journalism career, he has written for both The New York Times and The
Washington Post, and he was associate editor of The Washington Star. While
on the editorial page staff of The Washington Post, he shared a Pulitzer Prize in
1972 for Watergate coverage with Woodward, Bernstein and Herblock. His highly acclaimed
autobiography, A Man's Life (1982), was reprinted in 1991, and he was co-editor
with Fred Harris of Quiet Riots in 1988. Among an array of public service
activities, he served as past chair of the Board of Trustees of the Africa America
Institute and is a member of the Board of the NAACP Legal Defense Fund. He is publisher of
NAACP's journal Crisis and has served on the Board of Trustees of the University
of the District of Columbia and on the District of Columbia Board of Education. He teaches two upper-level interdisciplinary
courses. The first traces our nations
racial history beginning with our Colonial foundations down to the issues we currently
confront, and the second examines how the technologies of journalism and communication
have transformed American Presidential politics over the last 75 years. In a freshman seminar, he uses great literature to
compare how culture has shaped individuals across time and societies. In an Honors course he uses literature, works of
philosophy, and essays to examine the nature and the impacts of cultural arrangements that
mold contemporary Americans. Wilkins holds a law degree from the University of Michigan.
His book Jefferson's Pillow; The Founding Fathers and the Dilemma of Black Patriotism
was published in 2001 and won the 2002 NAIBA Book Award for Adult Non-Fiction. Dr. Wilkins was featured in an article in the Mason Gazette: http://gazette.gmu.edu/articles/8748 .
What I teach in the Fall
What I teach in the Spring
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