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paper trail

  • Thomas Chatterton Williams. Photo: Dominique Nabokov
    July 08, 2020

    Collected reactions to the Harper’s letter; Nan A. Talese will retire this year after six-decade publishing career

    Nan A. Talese is retiring later this year after a six-decade career in publishing. Talese first started working in the literary world in 1959, as a copy editor at Random House—later becoming the publisher’s first woman literary editor—and has worked at numerous houses since, founding her own imprint at Doubleday in 1990. Margaret Atwood, whose The Handmaid’s Tale was acquired by Talese, said of her longtime collaborator and friend: “No editor has seen so many changes and done so much in publishing as the legendary and much beloved Nan Talese, known fondly to some as ‘the Nanster.’ . . . I can’t

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  • Raquel Willis
    July 07, 2020

    Raquel Willis on Black trans power and her forthcoming book; Dana Canedy named publisher of Simon & Schuster

    At Forbes, Janice Gassam rounds up black businesses to support today for Blackout Day 2020. During the blackout, you can use Gassam’s list to purchase wine, kettle corn, coffee, clothes, and, of course, books: The list includes Elizabeth’s Bookshop & Writing Centre, a literacy center and store focused on celebrating marginalized voices.

    Nick Estes writes about the role disease has played in the mass killing of Indigenous people in the US, challenging the popular consuseus that the deaths were the result of “invisible, chance forces” such as old-world microbes that Indigenous people were not

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  • Ibram X. Kendi. Photo: Stephen Voss
    July 06, 2020

    Ibram X. Kendi reflects on freedom, power, and the Fourth of July

    At The Atlantic, Ibram X. Kendi, the author of Stamped from the Beginning: The Definitive History of Racist Ideas in America and How to Be an Antiracist—reflects on what the Fourth of July meant in 1776 and what it means now: “As we know all too well today, wealthy white American men did not stop rebelling when they won the American Revolution, when they gained the power to protect their declared independence. They continued to rebel to keep their power. They, ‘the Patriots.’ The rest of us have continued our rebellions because we have yet to gain the power to be free. The resisting rest of

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  • Tressie McMillan Cottom. Photo: The New Press
    July 03, 2020

    LA Times responds to open letter from its Guild’s Black Caucus; Tressie McMillan Cottom on class and white consumerism

    Eve L. Ewing on why she capitalizes the “W” in the word White when talking about race: “Whiteness is not only an absence. It’s not a hole in the map of America’s racial landscape. Rather, it is a specific social category that confers identifiable and measurable social benefits.”

    Tressie McMillan Cottom—author of Thick and Lower Ed—considers how the COVID-19 pandemic is making people uncomfortably aware of class in America: “The white consumer is fighting for their very lives, as they experience them. If they are not consuming, then they may not exist as they imagine they exist: good, hard-working

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  • Colson Whitehead. Photo: Chris Close
    July 02, 2020

    American history scholars discuss racism and memorials; Medium lists fifty Black Twitter accounts to follow

    The New York Times talks to editors, executives, writers, booksellers, agents, and publicists about what it’s like to be Black in the publishing industry.

    Vice has a deep dive into recent troubles at the Los Angeles Times. The story centers on the tenure of executive editor Norm Pearlstine, who was hired by a new owner in 2018 to revive the flagging paper: “His two years at the Times have been marked by success as well as failure; and his failures are not his alone, but those of an institution that has struggled to overcome a broken culture rooted in both mismanagement and the biases that

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  • Eddie S. Glaude Jr. Photo: © Sameer A. Khan
    July 01, 2020

    Media collective launches the Trans Journalists Association; Cornel West in conversation with Eddie S. Glaude Jr.

    Tonight, Cornel West will talk to Eddie S. Glaude Jr. about his new book, Begin Again: James Baldwin’s America and Its Urgent Lessons for Our Own. The event is co-hosted by Haymarket Books and Labyrinth Books.

    Laurence Ralph—author of the recent book The Torture Letters: Reckoning with Police Violence—presents a new short documentary, The Scars of Being Policed While Black.

    Yesterday, a collective of trans media professionals launched the Trans Journalists Association. Their website has a style guide for editors, writers, and reporters, and resources for employers.

    A court has temporarily

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  • Robin D. G. Kelley
    June 30, 2020

    Robin D. G. Kelley on defunding the police; Washington Post executive editor Marty Baron’s old-school stance

    The podcast Intercepted hosts scholar Robin D. G. Kelley, who talks to Jeremy Schall about Trump’s Tulsa rally and the 1921 race massacre, racial capitalism, defunding the police, and the Third Reconstruction. Kelley observes how the trope of the “outside agitator” has distorted and weakened a genuine movement: “There’s a way in which Trump and his ilk can take the idea or the fear of the outside agitator and flip it to vilify those who are genuinely fighting for social justice and for an end to policing and ignore, completely ignore if not justify the activities of groups who are actually

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  • Aaron Robertson
    June 29, 2020

    Aaron Robertson on the People’s Townhall on the future of publishing; When will Obama’s next memoir come out?

    In an article titled “How the Trump Campaign Is Drawing Obama Out of Retirement,” New York Times reporters Glenn Thrush and Elaina Plott offer some insight into the current state of the former president’s next memoir. In a package deal, Random House bought the memoirs of Michelle and Barack Obama’s memoirs in 2016 for $56 million. Michelle’s Becoming arrived in 2018. The publication date for Obama’s book is not yet set. According to the article: “The book’s timing remains among the touchiest of topics. Mr. Obama, a deliberate writer prone to procrastination—and lengthy digression—insisted that

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  • Sasha Bonét.  Photo: Jeremy Grier
    June 26, 2020

    Sasha Bonét on the art of collage and reimagining Black futures; The New Yorker Union demands a “just cause” provision

    The first episode of Diversity Hire, a new podcast (and newsletter) about being a “person of color” in media, is out now.

    Yesterday, the New Yorker Union undertook a half-day work stoppage to demand a “just cause” provision in their contract. The union stated that employees “will not participate in the production or promotion of content for the print magazine or the website,” from 9am to 1pm and reserve the right to take further action if management doesn’t adequately respond.

    At The Cut, Claire Lampen details “What We Know About the Killing of Elijah McClain.” McClain, an unarmed

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  • Amia Srinivasan. Photo: Nina Subin
    June 25, 2020

    Amia Srinivasan on gender-neutral pronouns and public language; Vice to launch an investigative news podcast

    In the London Review of Books, Amia Srinivasan examines the history of gender-neutral pronouns: “What words mean and which words exist is not up to any single person. But it is up to us, collectively. When an individual refuses the application of a word that applies, by the rules of public language, to them, or when an individual applies to themselves a word not yet in the public lexicon, they are making a move that they hope others will take up—and that will, in turn, change how they are seen and treated by others. Words can change the world.”

    Nikole Hannah-Jones on why it is time for

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  • Octavia E. Butler. Photo: Nikolas Coukouma/Wikicommons
    June 24, 2020

    Wesley Lowery on media objectivity and white neutrality; New podcast Octavia’s Parables devoted to the work of Octavia E. Butler

    President Trump’s younger brother has taken legal action in an attempt to block the publication of a tell-all book by the president’s niece, Mary L. Trump.

    In the New York Times opinion section, Wesley Lowery looks at the question of objectivity in the media and the ways in which white ideas and opinions are considered “neutral.” Lowry calls for a new standard of fairness and truth-telling: “instead of promising our readers that we will never, on any platform, betray a single personal bias . . . a better pledge would be an assurance that we will devote ourselves to accuracy, that we will

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  • Angela Davis. Photo: Columbia GSAPP/Wikicommons
    June 23, 2020

    Angela Davis on activism and optimism at WBUR; Novelist Carlos Ruiz Zafón has died at fifty-five

    At The Cut, Gabrielle Bellot looks at the case of Breonna Taylor and asks, “When Will Black Women See Justice?” It has been 101 days since Taylor was shot to death by police, and, so far, only one of the three officers has been fired and none have faced criminal charges. Bellot examines the ways in which violence against Black and Brown women is portrayed in the media, and notes that when women speak out against these injustices, they are chided for not doing so properly: “We are asked why we did not speak up in fury about our traumas immediately after they occurred; we are criticized, in turn,

    Read more
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