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paper trail

  • Atossa Araxia Abrahamian. Photo: Victor Jeffreys II
    July 24, 2020

    BuzzFeed has laid off fifty of seventy-five furloughed employees; Atossa Araxia Abrahamian is writing a new book

    Atossa Araxia Abrahamian is writing a new book, The Hidden Globe, to be published by Riverhead.

    On Tuesday, July 28th, Indiana University’s Arts and Humanities department will continue their series of panels, “Confronting Racism,” with a session on social justice and incarceration, featuring Clint Smith, Michael Harriot, Leah Derray, Kyra Harvey, and Brooke Harris.

    On Wednesday, July 29th, n+1 is hosting an online discussion about COVID-19 in state prisons. The panel will feature Sarah Resnick, Anthony Dixon, Michelle Lewin, and Jose Saldana.

    BuzzFeed has laid off fifty of seventy-four staff

    Read more
  • Cover of Polish Shadow (2006) by Rosalind Fox Solomon
    July 23, 2020

    Zoé Samudzi on Rosalind Fox Solomon’s honest photography; Inque magazine commits to run for ten years with zero ads

    In Jewish Currents’s spring issue, Zoé Samudzi profiles photographer Rosalind Fox Solomon in “A Journey Into the Heart of Whiteness.” Fox Solomon, a ninety-year-old artist who has been taking pictures for five decades, often took white families as her subject. Though her work frequently captures casual, everyday scenes, they can feel disquieting. As Samudzi observes, Fox Solomon “Draws to the surface an underlying menace, making visible the violence of the purity politic and the social obligation to blood and country that cement the white family bond.”

    The Nieman Foundation for journalism has

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  • E. Tammy Kim
    July 22, 2020

    E. Tammy Kim on “transnationally Asian” media; Wall Street Journal staffers want more transparency in the opinion section

    At Columbia Journalism Review, E. Tammy Kim reflects on turning away from US coverage of COVID-19 (“myopic at best and racist at worst”) and toward online “transnationally Asian” magazines published in English. “Their orientation is not so much postcolonial as anti-nationalist and internationalist,” Kim writes of outlets like Lausan, New Bloom, and New Naratif, “meaning that they’re keener to explore what’s shared between working people in say, Taipei and Los Angeles, or Bangkok and Davao City, than to ask whether Canada or Vietnam has the more capable government—a temptation of traditional

    Read more
  • Keeanga-Yamahtta Taylor. Photo: © Don Usner
    July 21, 2020

    Remembering political commentator Michael Brooks; Keeanga-Yamahtta Taylor on the Combahee River Collective

    Political commentator Michael Brooks has died at the age of thirty-seven. As the host of The Michael Brooks Show on YouTube, he was known for his comedy, empathy, and sharp political analysis. On Twitter, the tributes have been pouring in. At Jacobin, Bhaskar Sunkara remembers his colleague and friend: “[A] dream of a vibrant community nurturing left media was fundamental to Michael’s work. Not because he aspired to be an ‘influencer’ with a large individual platform, but because he knew how important it was to build the kind of bonds that you can’t have political action without.”

    In the New

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  • Rep. John Lewis in 2006. Photo: US Congress/Wikimedia Commons
    July 20, 2020

    Revisiting John Lewis’s National Book Award speech; Sloane Crosley sells novel

    Barack Obama, Joe Biden, Nancy Pelosi, and many others are paying tribute to John Lewis, the Civil Rights leader and Georgia congressman who died on Friday. On Twitter, political correspondent Alex Burns calls attention to a passage from David Halberstam’s The Children, in which one subject interviewed states that Lewis’s words “might have well been carved in granite.” “That young man is pure of heart.” Here is a video in which a deeply moved Lewis accepts the National Book Award for Young People’s Literature in 2016 for the graphic memoir March. “This is unreal. This is unbelievable. As some

    Read more
  • Michelle Obama. Photo: © Miller Mobley
    July 17, 2020

    The Literary Arts Emergency Fund to provide $3.5 million in one-time grants; Michelle Obama launches podcast

    The Literary Arts Emergency Fund will provide $3.5 million in one-time grants to publishers and literary organizations. The fund is supported by the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation, and was spearheaded by the Academy of American Poets, the Community of Literary Magazines and Presses, and the National Book Foundation.

    At ProPublica, an investigation into Facebook’s claim that they do not allow misinformation about voting on the site: “False claims, including conspiracy theories about stolen elections or outright misrepresentations about voting by mail by Trump and prominent conservative outlets,

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  • Rakesh Satyal. Photo: Dbrancazio/Wikicommons
    July 16, 2020

    Mainstream coverage of ongoing Black Lives Matter protests dwindles; Rakesh Satyal named executive editor at HarperOne

    At Electric Lit, Eva Rosen offers a reading list of books on housing inequality. Rosen, author of The Voucher Promise, notes that this form of discrimination is pervasive in America and has many consequences: “Housing drives all sorts of disparities in the U.S.: health, wealth, education, employment, exposure to the criminal justice system, even happiness. Yet, where we live is no accident: It is the result of decades of laws, policies, practices that inscribed the blueprint for racial and social inequality across the nation.”

    Novelist and editor Rakesh Satyal has been named executive editor

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  • Tiffany Walden. Photo: The TRiiBE
    July 15, 2020

    Bari Weiss and Andrew Sullivan resign; The TRiiBE editor-in-chief Tiffany Walden on the danger of sensationalist narratives

    Andrew Sullivan is resigning from New York magazine. Bari Weiss has resigned from the New York Times. Weiss’s letter calling it quits, in which she cites bullying at the paper and an “illiberal environment,” was approvingly shared by Donald Trump Jr., Ben Shapiro, Bill Maher, Sam Harris, and Ted Cruz, among others.

    The backlash to Robin DiAngelo’s bestseller White Fragility continues, with new ciritques by Daniel Bergner and John McWhorter.

    The head of the National Book Foundation, Lisa Lucas, is joining Penguin Random House as senior vice president and publisher of Pantheon and Schocken

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  • Josie Duffy Rice
    July 14, 2020

    Columbia launches public database for COVID-19 coverage; Josie Duffy Rice on national narratives and local organizing

    Namwali Serpell looks at photographer Ming Smith’s portraits of Afrofuturist poet and musician Sun Ra, and the challenges of their work. “These two artists dare us to reimagine black identity—that is, human identity—from the groundless ground up, as an order of being that stutters in and out of nonbeing, that dissolves and gathers itself and others, in turn, in time. Did Sun Ra truly believe he had once been transmolecularized to Saturn? Did he really want to save black people by sending them to outer space? Was he some kind of intergalactic Marcus Garvey, who sold tickets back to Africa but

    Read more
  • Damon Young. Photo: Sarah Huny Young
    July 13, 2020

    Damon Young reflects on “Serious Conversations About Racism”; Patricia Lockwood’s coronavirus diary

    According to the Washington Post’s “Fact Checker” column, Donald Trump has now made more than 20,000 “false or misleading” public statements.

    At the London Review of Books, Patricia Lockwood has written a diary about living with and through the coronavirus: “When I examined my history, I found the following search: insane after coronavirus? coronavirus made me insane? This can’t be entirely blamed on the illness. A few years earlier I had indulged in a similar query: insane after book deal? book deal made me insane? Other search strings of interest were: ‘Christy Turlington,’ ‘the balkans,’

    Read more
  • Sarah M. Broom. Photo: Grove Atlantic
    July 10, 2020

    Jamaican dub poet Linton Kwesi Johnson wins PEN Pinter Prize; Sarah M. Broom on Black authors’ freedom to write

    The Columbia Journalism Review is hosting a series of discussions with Black journalists about systemic racism in newsrooms. One of the participants, Wesley Lowery, observes, “there’s been a noticeable uptick in ‘Hey—could you give this a glance?’ notes that we’ve gotten from colleagues in recent weeks. And, to be clear, almost every black reporter I’ve ever encountered is eager and happy to help, but . . . there is very little appreciation of the real labor involved in being every person in the newsroom’s ‘black friend.'”

    Austin Channing Brown talks about her memoir, I’m Still Here: Black

    Read more
  • Yiyun Li. Photo: © Phillippe Matsas
    July 09, 2020

    Gabrielle Bellot points out what the Harper’s letter gets wrong; New York Times Magazine’s take on The Decameron

    Discourse about The Letter published by Harper’s Magazine has been fast and furious. Gabrielle Bellot provides some much-needed context and perspective.

    The New York Times Magazine has a special fiction issue inspired by Giovanni Boccaccio’s fourteenth-century classic, The Decameron. In her introduction, Rivka Galchen notes the parallels between Boccaccio’s plague-ruined era and our own: “Boccaccio writes that during the Black Death the people of Florence stopped mourning or weeping over the dead. After some days away, the young storytellers of his tale are finally able to cry, nominally over

    Read more
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