John Gerassi
John Gerassi (July 12, 1931 – July 26, 2012), also known as
Tito Gerassi or mononymously
Tito, was a French-American
leftist professor, journalist, author, scholar, political activist, and revolutionary. At birth, Tito's parents, artist
Fernando Gerassi and Ukrainian feminist Stépha Gerassi, were members of the
Montparnasse circle of artists and intellectuals that included
Pablo Picasso and his godfather
Jean-Paul Sartre. Initially working as a journalist for
''Time'' magazine and later a foreign correspondent for ''
The New York Times,'' he grew close to
Che Guevara and
Fidel Castro during the
Cuban Revolution and analyzed the American policy against
Latin America in his 1965 book ''The Great Fear in Latin America''. In 1966, Tito would investigate the
Boise homosexuality scandal in ''The Boys of Boise'', exposing the persecution of homosexuals in the city that was carried out under the guise of a
moral panic. Tito also utilized his close ties to figures to construct biographies, creating the only authorized biography of Sartre, ''Hated Conscience of His Century'' in 1989.
Tito also spent his life as an educator, teaching at institutions including
San Francisco State University, The
University of Paris (XII, Vincennes), the JFK Institute of the
Free University of Berlin,
UC Irvine, and
Bard College. At the time of his death, he was the senior professor of
Political Science at
Queens College, City University of New York, where he had been teaching since 1978.
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