Log In | Account Info

Cart | Checkout
 
 



View the SIU Press Catalog
 
The Mayors, 3rd Edition
The Chicago Political Tradition
3rd Edition
Edited by Paul M. Green and Melvin G. Holli
$27.50
Paper
0-8093-2612-4
978-0-8093-2612-9
376 pages, 6 x 9, 29 Illus.
1/12/2005

About the Book

The Mayors: The Chicago Political Tradition taps America’s most qualified observers to scrupulously assess the city’s mayors within the vigorous and tumultuous history of Chicago government. This revised and updated edition features extensive commentary on the enduring mayoral influence of Richard M. Daley.


“In the seventeen years since The Mayors was first published,” editors Paul M. Green and Melvin G. Holli write in the Preface to this edition, “Chicago politics has become more genteel, more docile, and more predictable. This dampening of the city’s once red-hot political coals is due to domination by one man: Mayor Richard M. Daley.” Also providing a political roadmap through the complex and fascinating labyrinth of Chicago politics are essays on other recent mayors: Richard J. Daley, Michael A. Bilandic, Jane M. Byrne, and Harold Washington.


Green and Holli’s popular study maintains that the key to the mayor’s office is power: the power to reward and the power to punish that comes with occupying the fifth floor of city hall in Chicago. Beginning with Joseph Medill, the Tribune publisher who guided the city in its rise from the ashes after the Great Fire of 1871, The Mayors takes readers through the terms of some of the city’s most colorful leaders: from the progressive Carter Harrison II and the radical Edward F. Dunne to the politically reticent Fred A. Busse and the loudmouth Big Bill Thompson. The essays collectively tell a riveting story of structures wherein aggressive power brokers surmount even massive corruption and scandal, and those who fail to seize the office’s inherent authority have short, uncomfortable tenures.

 

In addition to Green and Holli, contributors include David L. Protess, Edward R. Kantowicz, John D. Buenker, Maureen A. Flanagan, Douglas Bukowski, John R. Schmidt, Roger Biles, Arnold R. Hirsch, William J. Grimshaw, Monroe Anderson, Steve Neal, Steve Rhodes, and Laura S. Washington.


Authors/Editors

Paul M. Green is the Arthur Rubloff Professor and the director of policy studies at Roosevelt University. He is the author, coauthor, or editor of several books about Chicago and Illinois politics.

 

Melvin G. Holli, a professor emeritus of history at the University of Illinois at Chicago, is the author of numerous books, including The American Mayor: The Best and the Worst Big-City Leaders and The Wizard of Washington: Emil Hurja, Franklin Roosevelt, and the Birth of Public Opinion Polling.


Also of Interest

Mayors
Edited by Paul M. Green and Melvin G. Holli

We Are a College at War
Mary Weaks-Baxter, Christine Bruun, and Catherine Forslund

It's Good to Be Black
Ruby Berkley Goodwin

Chicago
Irving Cutler. Foreword by James F. Marran

Decisive Decade
Robert B. McKersie, Foreword by James R. Ralph Jr.