In the media is a fortnightly round-up of features written by, about or containing female writers that have appeared during the previous fortnight and I think are insightful, interesting and/or thought provoking. Linking to them is not necessarily a sign that I agree with everything that’s said but it’s definitely an indication that they’ve made me think. I’m using the term ‘media’ to include social media, so links to blog posts as well as traditional media are likely and the categories used are a guide, not definitives.
In the media is back in a slightly altered format. You might have spotted a change in the opening paragraph – this feature will now appear fortnightly rather than weekly. That doesn’t mean it’s going to be bigger than it was before, however. When I started this feature, the plan was to focus on fiction writers with published books but as I started to read more widely, I realised how many brilliant women columnists and features writers there are and it seemed ludicrous not to include them. I want to keep supporting them so you’ll notice as you scroll down that I’ve reduced the number of categories but I’ve added a regular columnists category to link to those writers who are consistently good/interesting.
This fortnight’s been all about whitewashing. First there was the Sufragette film which ignored any women of colour involved in the movement. Anita Anand asks ‘Were the Suffragettes racist?‘ in the Telegraph. Victoria Massie tells us about ‘3 black women who fought on the front lines for women’s suffrage‘ on NTRSCTN and a piece on Asian Suffragettes on British Protest at Home and Abroad was highlighted. Eesha Pandit writes, ‘The discomfiting truth about white feminism: Meryl Streep, Amy Poehler & the movement’s long history of racial insensitivity‘ on Salon while Henna Zamurd Butt asks, ‘So Nadiya won the Great British Bake Off, why the big deal?‘ on Media Diversified and Nadia Shireen says, ‘Why the world needs more Nadiyas‘ in The Pool.
And then there was Meg Rosoff who said,“there are not too few books for marginalised young people”. This came at the same time Leila Rasheed posted, ‘A New Scheme Hopes to Promote BME Voices in Children’s Literature‘ on The Asian Writer. Responses to Rosoff came from Camryn Garrett, ‘this is how the industry lives now: five signs that you might be suffering from white privilege’ on For all the Girls Who Are Half Monster; Edi Campbell, ‘SundayMorningReads‘ on Crazy QuiltEdi (whose Facebook page is where Rosoff made her comment); Kaye M, ‘This Is How I Life: An Open Letter to Meg Rosoff‘ on Medium; Radiya Hafiza ‘Why we need mirrors in literature‘ on Media Diversified; KT Horning, ‘Spouting Off While White‘ on Reading While White, and Debbie Reese, ‘About Meg Rosoff’s Next Book‘ on American Indians in Children’s Literature, which includes an up-to-date list of responses so far. And how about this for a radical idea: ‘Is Hermione Granger White?‘ Monika Kothari answers on Slate.
Reactions to Chrissie Hynde blaming herself when she was raped continue. Ann Friedman writes, ‘We Shouldn’t Let Chrissie Hynde Off the Hook So Easily‘ in The Cut while Tracey Thorn says, ‘Chrissie longed to be one of the boys. Unlike us, she didn’t have riot grrrls‘ in The New Statesman.
Finally, while there wasn’t a female winner of the Man Booker Prize, there was a female winner of The Guardian’s Not the Booker Prize. Congratulations to Kirstin Innes who won for her novel Fishnet. Unfortunately, both the Samuel Johnson Prize and the Goldsmiths Prize shortlists were somewhat lacking in women. Michael Caines offers an alternative all-female shortlist to the latter on the TLS while Cathy Rentzenbrink on blistering form in The Bookseller writes ‘On Noticing‘.
The best of the rest:
On or about books/writers/language:
- Elena Ferrante (translated by Ann Goldstein), ‘on Sense and Sensibility‘ in The Guardian
- Lucy Durrant, ‘Too Little Too Late: on Jean Rhys‘ on Thresholds
- Jane Smiley, ‘History vs Historical Fiction‘ in The Guardian
- Stephanie Butland ‘in Praise of the ‘Quiet Book’‘ on Isabel Costello’s Literary Sofa
- Justine Jordan, ‘A new Irish literary boom: the post-crash stars of fiction‘ in The Guardian
- Jill Bialowsky, ‘What Qualifies as Greatness: On Literary Awards Season‘ on The Millions
- Erica Wagner, ‘Gossip, truth and the impossibility of biography‘ in The Guardian
- Elena Ferrante (translated by Ann Goldstein), ‘The Author Is Purely a Name‘ in Guernica
- Alexandra Pechman, ‘It’s Complicated: on Clarice Lispector and Elizabeth Bishop‘ on Poetry Foundation
- Andrea Kleine, ‘The Story of a Murder‘ on Literary Hub
- Timothy Snyder, ‘Svetlana Alexievich: The Truth in Many Voices‘ in The New York Review of Books
- Naomi Alderman, ‘The first great works of digital literature are already being written‘ in The Guardian
- Rebecca Mascull, ‘Reading The Prime Writers‘ on Writers & Artists
- Sarah Crossan, ‘How writing about conjoined twins changed the way I wrote‘ in The Guardian
- Liz Windhorst Harmer, ‘How to Read Through the Depths of Postpartum Depression‘ on Literary Hub
- Jessi Stevens, ‘Against Realism‘ on The Rumpus
- Adrian van Young, ‘Flannery O’Connor: A Reading Primer‘ on Electric Literature
- Jeanette Winterson, ‘Rewrites Shakespeare‘ on Literary Hub
- Ed Vulliamy, ‘Edna O’Brien: from Ireland’s cultural outcast to literary darling‘ in The Guardian
- Marlon James, ‘My Hero: Toni Morrison‘ in The Guardian
- Kathryn Schulz, ‘Pond Scum‘ on Henry David Thoreau in The New Yorker
Personal essays/memoir:
- Emily Eades, ‘Becoming a mother without your own mother to rely on‘ in The Pool
- Tami, ‘Tears for my Mom‘ on Medium
- Ali Rachel Pearl, ‘On Tinder, Off Sex‘ in The New York Times
- Dorthe Nors, ‘A Wolf In Jutland: On the Writing Life in Denmark‘ on Electric Literature
- Rebecca Espiloy Baroma, ‘Rainbow Chard‘ in The Offing
- Virginia Pye, ‘A Woman Alone in China‘ on Literary Hub
- K.L. Carr, ‘This Time Last Year: On Intimacy, Suicidality, and Abuse‘ in The Toast
- Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie, ‘Raised Catholic‘ in The Atlantic
- Anonymous, ‘The Tech Exec With Boyfriends on Both Coasts‘ in The Cut
- Sarah Manguso, ‘The Grand Shattering‘ in Harper’s
- Lacy M. Johnson, ‘On Mercy‘ in Guernica
- Anisse Gross, ‘Stalking Murakami‘ on Design Sponge
- Pat Lipsky, ‘The Shoes Under the Art World‘ in The Awl
- Bettina McKelvey, ‘Fun Ticket‘ on Okey Panky
- Abby Higgs, ‘Search me: why did I go looking for my birth mother online?‘ in The Guardian
- Rachel Giese, ‘It’s Not Where You Come From, It’s Where You Belong‘ in The Haripin
- Sno Flo, ‘In Bruges‘ on Litro
- Amanda Fortini, ‘The Great Surrender‘ on GOOD
Feminism:
- Reni Eddo-Lodge ‘‘Liberation for some is liberation for none’: on women and black radical movements‘ on Verso Books
- Rachel Z. Arndt, ‘The Sexism of American Kitchen Design‘ in The Atlantic
- Jane Kramer, ‘Road Warrior: on Gloria Steinem‘ in The New Yorker
- Anna Oudra, ‘“Stick person,” “Skinny bitch,” “Giraffe”: Stop bullying me for being thin‘ on Salon
- Kai Cheng Thom, ‘Pursuing Happiness As A Trans Woman Of Color‘ on Buzzfeed
- Latoya Peterson, ‘#AskHerMore: On Rihannon and interviewing black celebrities‘ on Racialicious
- Rebecca Solnit, ‘The Mother of All Questions‘ in Harper’s
- Bee Rowlatt, ‘The original suffragette: the extraordinary Mary Wollstonecraft‘ in The Guardian
Society and Politics:
- Adia Harvey Wingfield, ‘Being Black—but Not Too Black—in the Workplace‘ in The Atlantic
- Beth Alverado, ‘Water in the Desert‘ in Guernica
- Molly Crabapple, ‘What Happens When Inmates in Solitary Confinement Blow the Whistle on Their Abuse?‘ in Vice
- Emily Greenhouse, ‘Inside the Wesleyan Molly Bust‘ in Rolling Stone
- Racquel Willis, ‘The Transgender Dating Dilemma‘ on Buzzfeed
- Erika Hayasaki, ‘A Criminal Mind‘ in The California Sunday Magazine
- Natalie Shure, ‘The Mystery Of Sacagawea‘ on Buzzfeed
- Anne Helen Peterson, ‘The Making of John Wayne‘ on Buzzfeed
Film, Television, Music and Fashion:
- Elmo Keep, ‘All You Zombies‘ in The Awl
- Kate Mossman, ‘“I was killed when I was 27”: the curious afterlife of Terence Trent D’Arby‘ in The New Statesman
- Claudia Rosenbaum, ‘How The Fast Times Of The Paparazzi Came To A Screeching Halt‘ on Buzzfeed
- Ayisha Malik on The Chronicles of Radiya
- Joanna Walsh on LitHub
- Nancy Fraser in The New York Times
- Sarah Weinman in The Los Angeles Review of Books
- Lauren Groff in Vice
- Molly Gaudry and Kristina Marie Darling on Critical Flame
- Claudia Rankine Part One and Part Two on Literary Hub
- Marilynne Robinson interviewed by Barack Obama (yes, you read that correctly) in The New York Review of Books
- Ann Beattie on The Millions
- Vendela Vida on Bookanista
- Beth Miller Part One and Part Two on Rebecca Mascull’s blog
- Rainbow Rowell on The Toast
- Valynne E. Maetani on Heidicker Writes
- Katherine Applegate in The Guardian
- Juliet Jacques on Salon
- Margaret Atwood on Hazlitt
- Louise O’Neill in The New Statesman
- Gloria Steinem in The Guardian
The regular columnists:
- Laurie Penny in The New Statesman
- Lucy Mangan in Stylist
- Roxane Gay in The Guardian US
- Yasmin Alibhai-Brown in The Independent
- Caitlin Moran in The Times
- Lauren Laverne in The Pool
- Ella Risbridger in The Pool
- Sali Hughes in The Pool
- Bim Adewunmi in The Guardian (this week’s Crush of the Week is Lorrie Moore)
- Sophie Heawood in The Guardian
- Eva Wiseman in The Observer
- Tracey Thorn in The New Statesman
- Chimene Suleyman and Maya Goodfellow on Media Diversified
Woohoo… it’s back & looking mighty fine – such a fantastic initiative & fabulous resource Naomi… the effort you must put into collating this is very much appreciated xxx
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Yes–brill resource. Thanks so much for this; it must take loads of time and it’s something I consistently look forward to as being top quality!
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Great to have this back! And thanks for the link to the Liz Windhorst Harmer article. Incredibly interesting.
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Bookmark!
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Thank you!
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A brilliant write-up and my reading for the fortnight sorted, who needs the Sunday papers!
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Thank you!
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