Professor of public communication; affiliate professor of history
Area of Expertise:
Politics, presidency, campaigns, American culture, 1960s, baby boom generation, race relations, social movements, civil rights, public relations, political communication, media, journalism.
Additional Information:
Leonard Steinhorn teaches political communication, public relations, media studies, and courses on American culture, presidential elections, the modern presidency, and the 1960s. He is author of the much discussed book The Greater Generation: In Defense of the Baby Boom Legacy (St. Martin's Press, 2006), and he is coauthor of the critically acclaimed By the Color of Our Skin: The Illusion of Integration and the Reality of Race (1999). Since 2012 Steinhorn has served as the CBS Radio News political analyst, and before that he spent ten years as the political analyst for FOX-5 News in Washington, DC. Steinhorn writes and lectures frequently about politics, presidential campaigns, the 1960s, race relations, social movements, American history, youth issues, generations, mass media, and trends in American culture. His work has appeared in books and scholarly publications as well as in magazines and newspapers including the Washington Post, New York Times, Politico, Political Wire, The Hill, Chicago Sun Times, International Herald Tribune, Baltimore Sun, Atlanta Journal-Constitution, World Financial Review, History News Network, Salon, Huffington Post, BillMoyers.com, among others. Steinhorn's approach to teaching became internationally visible when CNN came weekly to cover his real-time course on the 2000 election; his courses on subsequent presidential elections have been covered by NBC, FOX, and CBS affiliates. Steinhorn has appeared as an on-air expert in a number of documentaries, including The Sixties and 1968: The Year That Changed America on CNN, Superheroes Decoded on the History Channel, and The Kennedy Files on REELZ, and he also appeared in a DVD special feature on the baby boom generation for the final season of AMC's Mad Men. He has appeared a number of times on C-SPAN and many other outlets discussing politics and race relations, he has given hundreds of talks at home and abroad, and he currently lectures nationwide on politics and history for One Day University. Twice he was named American University's Faculty Member of the Year; he also has been named AU's Honors Professor of the Year; and from 2002 to 2004 he served as president of AU's Phi Beta Kappa chapter.
Foreign Language Fluency:
n/a
Academic Credentials:
BA, Vassar College; MA, Johns Hopkins University
Category:
Civil Rights, Journalism, Media Issues, Popular Culture, Public Relations, Race Relations, Government and Public Administration-Presidency, History-U.S. History, Politics-Campaigns and Elections