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Chicago '68: Bibliography and Filmography |
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All original material is written by Dean Blobaum. Copyright © 2003 by Dean Blobaum. All rights reserved. This text may be quoted in accordance with the Fair Use provisions of the US Copyright Act. It may be archived and redistributed in electronic form, provided that no fee is charged for access and provided that this entire notice is carried and the author of the review is notified. Archiving, redistribution, or republication of this text on other terms, in any medium, requires the consent of the author. |
Convention Week
Chicago Citizens Commission to Study the Disorders of Convention Week. Dissent in a Free Society. 1969. Chicago Department of Law [Raymond F. Simon, Corporation Counsel]. The Strategy of Confrontation: Chicago and the Democratic National Convention. 1968.
Chicago Department of Law. Crisis in Chicago, 1968: Mayor Richard J. Daley's Official Report—The Untold Story of the Convention Riots. New York: Beeline Books. 1968, saddle-stitched paperback, out of print.
Farber, David. Chicago '68. Chicago: The University of Chicago Press, 1988, clothbound, in print; 1994, paperback, in print.
Hayden, Tom. The Whole World Was Watching: The Streets of Chicago: 1968. Davis, CA: Panorama West Publishing, 1996, paperback, in print.
House Committee on Un-American Activities. Subversive Involvement in Disruption of 1968 Democratic Party National Convention HUAC hearings of October and December 1968.
Kusch, Frank. Battleground Chicago: The Police and the 1968 Democratic National Convention Westport: Praeger Publishers, 2004, cloth, in print. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2008, paperback, in print.
Lane, Mark. Chicago Eyewitness New York: Astor-Honor, 1968, clothbound, out of print.
Myrus, Donald (editor). Law & Disorder: The Chicago Convention and Its Aftermath Chicago: D. Myrus, 1968, saddle-stitched paperback, out of print.
Pierson, Robert L. Riots Chicago-style Great Neck, NY: Todd & Honeywell, 1984, cloth, out of print.
St. John, Jeffrey. Countdown to Chaos. Los Angeles: Nash Publishing Corp., 1969, clothbound, out of print.
Schneir, Walter (editor). Telling It Like It Was: The Chicago Riots. New York: Signet Books/New American Library, 1969, paperback, out of print.
Schultz, John. No One Was Killed: Documentation & Meditation : Convention Week, Chicago—August 1968. Chicago: Big Table, 1969, clothbound and paperback, out of print. Reprinted by John Schultz Associates, 1999, paperback.
Stein, David Lewis. Living the Revolution: The Yippies in Chicago. Indianapolis: The Bobbs-Merrill Company, Inc., 1969, clothbound, out of print.
Walker, Daniel. Rights in Conflict: The violent confrontation of demonstrators and police in the parks and streets of Chicago during the week of the Democratic National Convention of 1968. A report submitted by Daniel Walker, director of the Chicago Study Team, to the National Commission on the Causes and Prevention of Violence.
The Walker Report (as it is commomly called), however flawed it may be in its conclusions, is essential reading for anyone interested in Chicago '68. The report was publicly released on December 1, 1968 and is based on the Chicago Study Team's review of over 20,000 pages of statements from 3,437 eyewitnesses and participants, 180 hours of film, and over 12,000 still photographs. The Walker Report attached the label "police riot" to the events of Chicago '68--the notion that the spontaneous acts of individual policemen were ultimately responsible for the violence on the streets and in the parks of Chicago.
The Conspiracy Trial: Eight partipants in the Convention Week demonstrations were indicted on charges of conspiring to incite a riot and, individually, of inciting a riot. The 22,000+ pages of the official transcript are available in microform at the Federal Archives and at some libraries. There are at least four different abridged editions of the transcripts. Edited by Judy Clavir and John Spitzer. The Conspiracy Trial.
Decribed as: "The extended edited transcript of the trial of the Chicago Eight. Complete with motions, rulings, contempt citations, sentences and photographs." Introduction by William Kunstler. Foreword by Leonard Weinglass. Indianapolis: Bobbs-Merrill Company, 1970, clothbound and paperback, out of print.
Edited and with illustrations by Jules Feiffer. Pictures at a Prosecution: Drawings and Texts from the Chicago Conspiracy Trial. New York, Grove Press, Inc., 1971, clothbound, out of print.
Edited by Mark L. Levine, George C. McNamee, and Daniel Greenberg. The Tales of Hoffman. Introduction by Dwight MacDonald. New York: Bantam, 1970, paperback, out of print.
Edited by Jon Wiener. Conspiracy in the Streets: The Extraordinary Trial of the Chicago Eight. New York: The New Press, 2006, paperback, publication scheduled for August 2006.
Epstein, Jason. Great Conspiracy Trial. New York: Random House and Vintage Books. 1970, clothbound, out of print.
Hoffman, Abbie and others. The Conspiracy. New York: Dell, 1969, out of print.
Lukas, J. Anthony. The Barnyard Epithet & Other Obscenities. Notes on the Chicago Conspiracy Trial. Drawings by Irene Siegel. NYC: Harper & Row, 1970, clothbound, out of print.
Okpaku, Joseph and Verna Sadock. Verdict! The Exclusive Picture Story of the Trial of the Chicago 8 New York: The Third Press--Joseph Okpaku Publishing Co., Inc., 1970, cloth bound, out of print.
Schultz, John. Motion Will Be Denied: A New Report on the Chicago Conspiracy Trial. New York: Morrow, 1972, clothbound and paperback, out of print. Schultz, John. The Chicago Conspiracy Trial. New York: Da Capo, 1993, paperback, in print.
Audio and visual media: Television coverage: For an appreciation of the events of Convention Week, the television news footage is indispensable. However, it covers only a small portion of events. In 1968 there were no portable minicams, no mobile satellite hookups. Live television coverage was limited to events inside the International Amphitheatre. Everything else was shot with film cameras or video cameras. Several video cameras were in fixed positions outside the Hilton. The seventeen tumultuous minutes in front of the Hilton on the night of August 28th—broadcast while nominating speeches were being made at the Amphitheatre—thus have come to symbolize Convention Week.
Films: Films by Newsreel. Newsreel was a political filmmaking collective in the Sixties. Their films including coverage of Chicago '68 are: Summer '68 and Yippie. [Yippie can be viewed on Google Video (12 minutes).] Films from Third World Newsreel. TWN emerged from Newsreel "as a result of organizational restructuring in the mid-70s" (quoted from their website). In addition to the Newsreel films above, TWN also lists Chicago Convention Challenge. What Trees Do They Plant? (1968) Immediately after the events of August 1968, the city of Chicago defended the actions of its police in a one-hour documentary broadcast on 150 TV stations nationwide on September 15, 1968. Seasons Change (1968) In response to What Trees Do They Plant? the American Civil Liberties Union produced a one-hour rebuttal. Medium Cool (1969) Cinema verité from Chicago '68. Haskell Wexler sent his cast and crew into the streets; his fictional script about a Chicago TV cameraman culminates in scenes of the mayhem of Convention Week. As the tear gas billows, you can hear a crew member yell, "Look out Haskell. It's for real." Yeah, no kidding. Arguably, Wexler's portrayal of the events of August 1968 is more accurate than any other. Conventions: The Land Around Us (1970) Assembled by Kaye Miller and Gerald Swatez at the Social Sciences Research Film Unit at the University of Illinois at Chicago Circle, Conventions is a mix of footage from Chicago '68, occasional footage from other events of the period (the Apollo 11 moonlanding, for example), with quotations from social theorists scattered in. A hodge-podge, but worth watching for the extensive archival footage. [Viewable on Google Video (68 minutes).] Conspiracy: The Trial of the Chicago 8 (1987) Directed by Jeremy Kagan; originally aired on HBO in 1987. Combines dramatization of the Conspiracy Trial with footage from Convention Week and new interviews of the defendants. Chicago 10 (2007) Directed by Brett Morgen. Premiered at the 2007 Sundance Film Festival and released in theaters in February 2008. Uses archival footage and motion-capture animation to look at the Conspiracy Trial and the events of Chicago '68. (8 defendants + 2 lawyers = 10.) Not a documentary in the usual sense, this film works on an emotional level more than an intellectual one. Don't think of it as history but as a visual and aural tribute to the Yippies and especially Abbie Hoffman, whose brilliant rhetoric is the heart of the film. The implicit argument of the film is that the primary issue in 1968 and at the trial was about the free expression of unpopular opinion. Audiotape: The Chicago Conspiracy Trial A two-hour adaptation from the trial transcripts by Peter Goodchild. Performed by L.A. Theatre Works in 1995. Archival sources: The interviews and statements collected by the Chicago Study Team, which became the basis for the Walker Report, are held in the Lyndon Baines Johnson Library in Texas. The Cornell University Library holds the collected papers and audio-visual material of Sarah Elbert. In 1968 she was Sarah Diamant and made video and tape recordings of the demonstrations as well as conducting interviews, all as research for her dissertation. The library has a guide to her papers. The files of the Chicago Red Squad are archived at the Chicago Historical Society, but are sealed until 2012. The Wisconsin State Historical Society has extensive archives from the peace and civil rights movements of the Sixties. Background reading The campaigns and conventions of 1968: Chester, Lewis, and Godfrey Hodgson, and Bruce Page. An American Melodrama: The Presidential Campaign of 1968. New York: The Viking Press, 1969, clothbound, out-of-print. McGinniss, Joe. The Selling of the President 1968. New York: Trident Press, 1969, clothbound, out-of-print. Mailer, Norman. Miami and the Siege of Chicago: An Informal History of the Republican and Democratic Conventions of 1968. New York: Signet Books/New American Library, 1968, paperback, out-of-print. Reprinted with a new introduction by Tom Wicker; New York: Primus/Donald I. Fine, 1986, paperback, in print. Also reprinted with photographs in Some Honorable Men: Political Conventions 1960-1972; New York: Little, Brown and Co., clothbound, out-of-print. White, Theodore H. The Making of the President 1968 New York, Atheneum Publishers, 1969, clothbound, out-of-print. Witcover, Jules. The Year the Dream Died: Revisiting 1968 in America New York: Warner Books, 1997, clothbound, out-of-print. New York: Warner Books, 1998, paperback. Other key books for background: Dissent and Disorder: a Report to the Citizens of Chicago on the April 27 Investigating Commission. April 27 Peace Parade. [Chicago: American Civil Liberties Union. 1968]
Updated: April 3, 2008 |