Chicago Film Critics Association - Members

Members

Current members include:

  • Sarah Knight Adamson
  • Zbigniew Banas
  • Shelley Cameron
  • Dave Canfield
  • Vittorio Carli
  • Erik Childress
  • Camerin Courtney
  • Bonnie DeShong
  • Nick Digilio
  • Michael Drakulich
  • Mark Dujsik
  • Roger Ebert
  • Adam Fendelman
  • Lee Gerstein
  • Dann Gire
  • Todd Hertz
  • Jan Lisa Huttner
  • Bruce Ingram
  • David Kaplan
  • Jeanne Kaplan
  • Adam Kempenaar
  • Ben Kenigsberg
  • Richard Knight, Jr.
  • Josh Larsen
  • Marcus Leshock
  • Jonathan Lewis
  • Rilio Mastrantonio
  • Patrick McDonald
  • Patrick Z. McGavin
  • Jonathan Miller
  • Sergio Mims
  • Matt Pais
  • J. Robert Parks
  • Locke Peterseim
  • John Petrakis
  • Keith Phipps
  • Michael Poulos
  • Steven Prokopy
  • Nathan Rabin
  • Dean Richards
  • Alejandro Riera
  • Matty Robinson
  • Tasha Robinson
  • Richard Roeper
  • David Schultz
  • Matthew Sheehan
  • Lee Shoquist
  • Alissa Simon
  • George Singleton
  • Peter Sobczynski
  • Colin Souter
  • Bill Stamets
  • Brian Tallerico
  • Scott Tobias
  • Jeffrey Westhoff
  • Michael Wilmington
  • Bill Zwecker

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Famous quotes containing the word members:

    For let our finger ache, and it endues
    Our other healthful members even to a sense
    Of pain.
    William Shakespeare (1564–1616)

    I have more in common with a Mexican man than with a white woman.... This opinion ... chagrins women who sincerely believe our female physiology unequivocally binds all women throughout the world, despite the compounded social prejudices that daily affect us all in different ways. Although women everywhere experience life differently from men everywhere, white women are members of a race that has proclaimed itself globally superior for hundreds of years.
    Ana Castillo (b. 1953)

    The members of a body-politic call it “the state” when it is passive, “the sovereign” when it is active, and a “power” when they compare it with others of its kind. Collectively they use the title “people,” and they refer to one another individually as “citizens” when speaking of their participation in the authority of the sovereign, and as “subjects” when speaking of their subordination to the laws of the state.
    Jean-Jacques Rousseau (1712–1778)