Robert W. Cherny is professor emeritus of history at San Francisco State University. His publications deal with U.S. politics in the Gilded Age and Progressive Era and with the history of San Francisco, California, and the West. His most recent book, The Coit Tower Murals: New Deal Art and Political Controversy in San Francisco (2024) expands on the history of New Deal art by focusing first on the once controversial murals at Coit Tower in San Francisco and then looking more generally at the influence of those murals and at recent controversies over New Deal art in San Francisco. Among his other recent books, San Francisco Reds: Communists in the Bay Area, 1919-1958 (2024), explores the history of the Communist Party through the experiences of some fifty individuals active in the Bay Area, most of whom joined in the 1920s or 1930s, and most of whom left the party in late 1950s. Harry Bridges: Labor Radical, Labor Legend (2023), the biography of the long-time leader of the Pacific Coast longshore and warehouse union, deals with labor and politics on the Pacific Coast from the 1930s to the 1980s. Victor Arnautoff and the Politics of Art (2017), examines New Deal and Cold War art and politics through the life of a San Francisco artist.
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