How an American Family Went to the Supreme Court with a First Amendment Defense and Beat HUAC

Table of contents

Foreword
Introduction: Red Diapers
Chapter One: A Knock at the Door
Chapter Two: Will Not/Cannot
Chapter Three: Surprised and Shocked
Chapter Four: Lacking Contrition
Chapter Five: Snowball in Hell
Chapter Six: In Lieu of “Ability”
Chapter Seven: Uncompromising Independence
Chapter Eight: Under the Velvet Glove
Chapter Nine: Not Fine for Yellin
Afterword
 

Description

“YOU ARE HEREBY COMMANDED to be and appear before the Committee on Un-American Activities of the House of Representatives of the United States, or a duly appointed subcommittee thereof, on February 10 (Monday), 1958, at ten o’clock a.m. at City Council Chambers, City Hall, Gary, Indiana, then and there to testify touching matters of inquiry committed to said committee, and not to depart without leave of said committee.”

So began a decade of hardship for Ed and Jean Yellin and their three young children as the repressive weight of the U.S. government, caught up in the throes of McCarthyism, crashed down upon their careers, their daily household budget, and their relationships to colleagues, neighbors, and their country. In Contempt is a faithful, factual testament to the enduring quality of patriotic dissent in our evolving democracy—and a loving reconstruction of what it meant to be labeled “unAmerican” for defending the Constitution.
 

Ed Yellin was Professor at the Albert Einstein College of Medicine.

Jean Fagan Yellin is Distinguished Professor Emerita at Pace University.

Read: Article featured in Inside Higher Education | 02/24/2022