Martin A. Berger - "Inventing Stereotype" - Kenneth Warren

Wednesday, January 21, 2026 - 4:00pm - 5:00pm

Martin A. Berger will discuss his new book Inventing Stereotype: Race, Representation, and Interwar America. He will be joined in conversation by Kenneth Warren. A Q&A and book signing will follow the discussion. 

At the Co-op.

RSVP HERE

About the book: With Inventing Stereotype, Martin A. Berger excavates the lineage of stereotype as a concept, illustrating how perception of stereotypes in works of literature and fine art shifts relative to representational norms.

Upending a century of scholarly and popular thinking about stereotype, Berger traces our current understanding of it to the 1920s, when American journalist and public intellectual Walter Lippmann borrowed the term from printmaking techniques and defined it as a shared mental picture that simplified a person, event, group, or thing so it could be easily grasped. Berger uncovers stereotype’s intellectual debts to philosophy, psychology, political science, and, in particular, art history and interwar racial theories.

Inventing Stereotype analyzes a series of plays, novels, and paintings from the 1920s and 1930s that sparked fierce debate about whether they employed racial stereotypes in the depiction of Black, Jewish, and other characters. Through careful attention to audience responses—parsed by race, political leanings, religion, and class—the book illustrates how artistic depictions are categorized as either stereotyped or not, relative to current representational norms, rather than to their success in conveying the authentic identities of individuals or racial groups.

About the author: Martin A. Berger is provost and senior vice president of academic affairs at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago. Berger is the author of Man Made: Thomas Eakins and the Construction of Gilded Age Manhood, Sight Unseen: Whiteness and American Visual Culture, Seeing through Race: A Reinterpretation of Civil Rights Photography, and the exhibition catalog Freedom Now! Forgotten Photographs of the Civil Rights Struggle.

About the interlocutor: Kenneth Warren is associate chair and Fairfax M. Cone Distinguished Service Professor in the Department of English Language and Literature at the University of Chicago. He is the author of Black Studies, Cultural Politics, and the Evasion of Inequality: The Farce This TimeWhat Was African American Literature?So Black and Blue: Ralph Ellison and the Occasion of Criticism, and Black and White Strangers: Race and American Literary Realism. He is also coeditor of two books: Renewing Black Intellectual History: The Material and Ideological Foundations of African America Thought and Jim Crow, Literature, and the Legacy of Sutton E. Griggs.

Event Location: 
The Seminary Co-op
5751 S Woodlawn Ave
Chicago, IL 60637