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Marcia Chatelain
Breaking the Chokehold- A Radical Approach to Disrupting the Policing System, Marcia Chatelain (cropped).jpg
Born 1979 (age 44–45)
Education
Awards Pulitzer Prize for History (2021)
Scientific career
Institutions University of Pennsylvania Georgetown University
Doctoral advisor Mari Jo Buhle

Marcia Chatelain (born 1979) is an American academic who serves as the Penn Presidential Compact Professor of Africana Studies at the University of Pennsylvania. In 2021, she was awarded the Pulitzer Prize for History for her book Franchise: The Golden Arches in Black America, for which she also won the James Beard Award for Writing in 2022. Chatelain was the first black woman to win the latter award.

She is also the creator of the Ferguson Syllabus social media campaign and the author of South Side Girls: Growing Up in the Great Migration.

Biography

Education and career

Chatelain was born in 1979 in Chicago, Illinois. Raised in Chicago, she attended St. Ignatius College Prep.

She graduated from the University of Missouri in 2001, with degrees in journalism and religious studies. She then worked as a Resident Scholar at the Harry S. Truman Scholarship Foundation. Chatelain received her A.M. and Ph.D. in American Civilization from Brown University, graduating in 2008, and was awarded the University of California-Santa Barbara's Black Studies Dissertation Fellowship. Chatelain worked as the Reach for Excellence Assistant Professor of Honors and African American Studies at the University of Oklahoma's Honors College, before becoming a Provost's Distinguished Associate Professor of History and African American Studies at Georgetown University.

Marcia Chatelain, The Undemocratic American State? Race and the Lessons of History
Chatelain in 2018

#FergusonSyllabus

In 2014, following the shooting of Michael Brown in Ferguson, Missouri, Chatelain mobilized other scholars on Twitter to talk about what was happening in Ferguson with their students and contribute to a crowdsourced reading list. The result became known as the #FergusonSyllabus. Its success has led to other crowdsourced syllabi to respond to national tragedies. In 2016, the Chronicle of Higher Education named Chatelain a Top Influencer in academics, in recognition of the success of #FergusonSyllabus.

Podcasting

In 2017, Chatelain contributed to the "Undisclosed" podcast as a resident historian. As of August 2020, she hosted the Slate podcast "The Waves" on feminism, gender, and popular culture.

Awards, honors, and service

Chatelain has received awards from the Ford Foundation, the American Association of University Women, and the German Marshall Fund of the United States. She has won teaching awards at Georgetown, where she serves on the Working Group on Slavery, Memory, and Reconciliation. In 2019, Chatelain was named an Andrew Carnegie Fellow. She also served as an Eric and Wendy Schmidt Fellow at the New America Foundation.

In 2021, Chatelain was awarded the Pulitzer Prize for History for her book Franchise: The Golden Arches in Black America. For her work on Franchise, Chatelain also received the 2022 James Beard Foundation Book Award for Writing, the 2021 Hagley Prize in Business History, the 2021 Organization of American Historians Lawrence W. Levine Award, the 2021 Hurston/Wright Foundation Legacy Award, the 2019-2021 Business History Review Alfred and Fay Chandler Book Award, and the 2020 Hooks National Book Award.

In 2023, Chatelain was nominated to the American Academy of Arts and Sciences.

Works

Chatelain has published two books: South Side Girls: Growing Up in the Great Migration (Duke University Press, 2015), about the history of Chicago's Great Migration through the lens of black girls' and Franchise: The Golden Arches in Black America (Liveright/W.W. Norton, 2020) about the history of the relationship between civil rights and the fast food industry.

Personal life

Chatelain is Catholic.

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