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 as traditional media are likely and the categories used are a guide, not definitives.
The last fortnight’s been dominated by death. On Thursday, Jenny Diski died less than two years after being diagnosed with terminal cancer. Literary Hub ran ‘Remembering Jenny Diski‘ including pieces from Hayley Mlotek, Michelle Dean, Joanna Walsh, Bridget Read, Laura Marsh, Marta Bausells and Charlotte Shane. The Guardian ran an extract from her cancer diary. Joanne Harris wrote a found poem ‘Opium Ice Cream‘ from Diski’s tweets, and The London Review of Books opened Jenny Diski’s entire archive to non-subscribers.
The previous week comedian Victoria Wood died. A.L. Kennedy declared her, ‘My Hero‘ in The Guardian; Helen Walmsley Johnson wrote, ‘Victoria Wood gave us the gift of being able to laugh at ourselves‘ in The New Statesman
Although he’s not a female writer, Prince also died just over a week ago and so much brilliant writing by women has come from that: Porochista Khakpour, ‘Prince’s Woman and Me: The Collaborators Who Inspired a Generation‘ in the Village Voice; Maya West, ‘A Hierarchy of Love and Loss and Prince‘ on Jezebel; Bim Adewunmi, ‘Celebrating Prince For 48 Hours In Minneapolis‘ on Buzzed; Heather Haverilsky, ‘Prince Showed Me a Whole New Way of Existing‘ on The Cut; Amanda Marcotte, ‘Sexy MFers, unite: The feminist power of Prince’s sex-positive songs‘ on Salon; K.T. Billey, ‘Prince and the queer body: Our dirty patron saint of pop gave me permission to think outside the gender binary‘ on Salon; Kaitlyn Greenidge, ‘Surviving a Long Alaskan Winter with Prince‘ on Literary Hub; Julianne Escobedo Shepherd, ‘Prince Spent His Life Elevating and Mentoring Women‘ on Jezebel; Lily Burano, ‘Why Prince Was a Hero to Strippers‘ on The Cut; Ashley Weatherford, ‘Understanding the Politics of Prince’s Hair‘ on The Cut; Mona Hayder, ‘Prince Was a Demigod Who Uplifted the Masses Through Music‘ on Literary Hub; Naomi Jackson, ‘Prince: Finding Joy Outside Conformity‘ on Literary Hub; Rhiannon Lucy Cosslett, ‘Prince conjured the kind of sex you’d want to have – filthy and fun, and sometimes offensive‘ in The Independent; Tracy King, ‘We should celebrate Prince for championing female musicians‘ in The New Statesman; Laura Craik, ‘“I loved him because of how his music made me feel”‘ on The Pool; Michelle Garcia, ‘Prince gave black kids permission to be weirdos‘ on Vox; Ijeoma Oluo, ‘Prince Was The Patron Saint Of Black Weirdos‘ on The Establishment.
Other brilliant writing about music came from the launch of Beyoncé’s new album Lemonade. Brittany Spanos, ‘How Beyonce’s ‘Lemonade’ Reclaims Rock’s Black Female Legacy‘ in Rolling Stone; Mandy Stadtmiller, ‘How Lemonade Helped Me Talk to My Husband About Cheating‘ on The Cut; Treva Lindsey, ‘Beyoncé’s Lemonade Isn’t Just About Cheating, It’s About Black Sisterhood‘ in Cosmopolitan; Caroline O’Donoghue, ‘Monica, Becky With The Good Hair, and the power of the Other Woman‘ in The Pool; Diamond Sharp, ‘Beyonce’s ‘Lemonade’ Is an Anthem for the Retribution of Black Women‘ on Vice; Morgan Jerkins, ‘‘Lemonade’ Is About Black Women Healing Themselves and Each Other‘ in Elle; Daisy Buchanan, ‘What can Beyoncé’s Lemonade teach us about love?‘ on The Pool; Vanessa Kisuule, ‘Why Beyoncé’s ‘Lemonade’ Shows a Refinement of her Artistry‘ on Gal-Dem; Carrie Battan, ‘Beyoncé’s “Lemonade” Is a Revelation of Spirit‘ in The New Yorker; Priscilla Ward, ‘Beyoncé’s radical invitation: In “Lemonade,” a blueprint for black women working through pain‘ on Salon; Ezinne Ukoha, ‘I Will Do Better By My Sisters‘ on Medium; June Eric-Udorie, ‘Beyoncé’s Lemonade, and the power it bestows young black women‘ on The Pool; Rafia Zakaria, ‘Warsan Shire: the Somali-British poet quoted by Beyoncé in Lemonade‘ in The Guardian; Juliane Okot Bitek wrote, ‘On the Poet Warsaw Shire, Nobody’s Little Sister‘ on Literary Hub. While Jamila addressed Piers Morgan’s criticisms of the album with ‘Dear Piers…‘ on her blog.
And I wanted to include this story because it’s just lovey: Jessie Burton’s new novel The Muse includes a setting named after Waterstones’ bookseller Leila Skelton. Skelton does the most incredible window displays at the Doncaster shop which are often shared on Twitter.
The best of the rest:
On or about books/writers/language:
- Catherine Bennett, ‘Modern tribes: the Elena Ferrante fan‘ in The Guardian
- Erika Janik, ‘Women Detectives in Fact and Fiction‘ on Literary Hub
- Amanda Fortini, ‘Why Can’t You Be Sweet?‘ in The Los Angeles Review of Books
- Jacqueline Wilson, ‘My Writing Day‘ in The Guardian
- Elizabeth Poliner, ‘How Mapping Alice Munro’s Stories Helped Me as a Writer‘ on Literary Hub
- Sarah Churchill, ‘Bring out the Great Gatsby gin and jazz: it’s time to breath new life into the literary lecture‘ in The Guardian
- Laura Barnett, ‘The Joys (and Perils) of Literary Tourism‘ on Literary Hub
- Nakul Krishna, ‘Enid Blyton, moral guide‘ on Aeon
- Summer Brennan, ‘On the Heartbreaking Difficulty of Getting Rid of Books‘ on Literary Hub
- Selin Gökcesu, ‘Jane and I: On Re-Reading Jane Eyre‘ on Electric Literature
- Idra Novey, ‘Learning to Be Embarrassed on the Page‘ on Catapult
- Sarah Moss, ‘Shakespeare for Children‘ on Granta
- Jillian Keenan, ‘Hamlet Was a Bro Who Didn’t Even Like Sex‘ on Literary Hub
- Julianne Ross, ‘You Want a Piece of Me: Elena Ferrante and the Myth that Female Artists Owe Us More than Their Work‘ on MTV
- Robert McCrum, ‘The 100 best nonfiction books: No 13 – The Female Eunuch by Germaine Greer (1970)‘ in The Guardian
- Carol Lovekin, ‘on being published in later life‘ on The Literary Sofa
- Nora Zelevansky, ‘How to Write Teen Girl Characters‘ on Literary Hub
- Kit de Waal, ‘Ideas are free, but writing is expensive: how can we ensure disadvantaged voices are heard?‘ in The New Statesman
- Joanna Walsh, ‘Are we sex-literate? Why we should all be writing more about pleasure‘ in The New Statesman
- Aysha Khan, ‘Face-Off‘ in Reorient
- Anne Enright, ‘My Writing Day‘ in The Guardian
- Curtis Sittenfeld, ‘The secret to work/life balance? There isn’t one‘ on The Pool
- Melissa Goodrich, ‘Diving Into the Faery Handbag: On Fabulism‘ on Electric Literature
- Emma Butcher, ‘The secret history of Jane Eyre: Charlotte Brontë’s private fantasy stories‘ in The Guardian
- Zeffie Gaines, ‘Falling Apart: A Meditation on Love and the Work of Baldwin, Winterson, and Morrison‘ on Electric Literature
- Bridget Read, ‘Charlotte Brontë May Have Started the Fire, But Jean Rhys Burned Down the House‘ on Literary Hub
- Varaidzo, ‘From school books to publishing, black girls deserve better representation‘ in The New Statesman
- Lyndsay Faye, ‘If Jane Eyre Came Out Today Would it Be Marketed as Genre?‘ on Literary Hub
- Sarah Berry, ‘My Pilgrimage to the House of Brontë‘ on The Millions
- Anna March, Jen Fitzgerald, Ashley Ford and Ashley Perez, ‘Most writers get screwed: We did the math, and it’s true — literary prizes exclude writers outside the campus gates‘ on Salon
- Stephanie Boland, ‘From Enid Blyton to Richard Hoggart: The use of literacy‘ in The New Statesman
- Alexandra Molotokow, ‘Maggie Nelson Refuses to Make Things Simple‘ on The Cut
- Elif Shafak, ‘On Women Writers Transcending Boundaries‘ on the Bailey’s Prize blog
- Ilana Massad, ‘Read Between the Racism: The Serious Lack of Diversity in Book Publishing‘ on Broadly
- Alison Flood, ‘Are most romance novels badly written?‘ in The Guardian
- Alison Flood, ‘Books by earliest women writers in English on display together for first time‘ in The Guardian
- Aya de Leon, ‘Portrait of the #WriterMom as a Member of the Working Class‘ on her blog
- Zoey Cole, ‘Remembering the Great C.D. Wright‘ on Literary Hub
- Virginia Baily, ‘Travels with my Aunt‘ on Virago
- Steph Harmon, ‘Charlotte Wood’s The Natural Way of Things wins $50,000 Stella prize‘ in The Guardian
- Bhavneet Kaur, ‘The Poetics of Resistance‘ in Kindle
- Sam Jordison, ‘Virginia Woolf in Brontë country: picking apart the genius in Jane Eyre‘ in The Guardian
- Georgette Mushier, ‘What literacy can do for children in institutions‘ in The New Statesman
- Sarah Ladipo Manyika, ‘Why I chose an African publisher over a western one‘ in The Guardian
- Curtis Sittenfeld, ‘Was Jane Austen a feminist? The answer is in her stories‘ in The Guardian
Personal essays/memoir:
- Terri White, ‘The story of me and my beehive‘ on The Pool
- Claire Woods, ‘‘As I woke up each morning, my pregnancy screamed at me’‘ in The Irish Times
- Eleanor Franzén, ‘Death Out of Season‘ on Litro
- Alana Massey, ‘My Boyfriend Isn’t My Best Friend — My Cat Is‘ on The Cut
- Lorena Piñeiro, ‘Penance‘ on Midnight Breakfast
- Linh Le, ‘How I learned to love my selfie‘ on Hello Giggles
- Lynn Murray, ‘The Carnival of Kid Baseball‘ on Tin House
- Susan Shapiro, ‘The Line Between Professor and Predator Isn’t Always So Clear‘ on The Cut
- Jung Yun, ‘My Fargo‘ on The Atlantic
- Kai Kalia Yang, ‘My Father the Song Poet‘ on Literary Hub
- Alexandra Reisner, ‘Small Bodies‘ on Electric Literature
- Jennifer Fliss, ‘The Day I told My Father to Shoot Himself‘ on Narratively
- Sara Lieberman, ‘Dating in New York Ruined Me for Paris‘ on The Cut
- Christina Crosby, ‘Your Puny, Vulnerable Self‘ on The Offing
- Anca Szilágyi, ‘Used to Be Schwartz‘ on The Rumpus
- Catherine Lloyd Burns, ‘Remembering John the Hotdog Man‘ on Guernica
- Rebecca Schiff, ‘On My Abnormally Quiet Jewish Family‘ on Literary Hub
- Mandy Stadtmiller, ‘I Love My Husband, But I Hate Working With Him‘ on The Cut
- Abigail Rasminsky, ‘I Had a Baby in Europe; Here’s What It Did to Me‘ in The Cut
- Chantal Braganza, ‘A Grief Like This‘ on Hazlitt
- Deborah A. Lott, ‘My Dream of Androgyny‘ on The Rumpus
- Rachel Charlene Lewis, ‘After Sandra Bland‘ on The Normal School
- Marisa Bate, ‘My mum was stalked when I was a child. The impact is lasting on us all‘ on The Pool
- Ella Dawson, ‘Good Girl‘ on Femsplain
- Laura Kasinof, ‘The Violence Was Once Mine‘ on Guernica
- Decca Aitkenhead, ‘The Loneliness of Losing Your Partner‘ on Well Doing
Feminism:
- Megan Garber, ‘Seeing Red: The Rise of Mensesplaining‘ on The Atlantic
- Alexandra Petri, ‘Play the ‘woman card’ and reap these ‘rewards’!‘ in The Washington Post
- Dayna Evans, ‘Here’s What Happens When Men Write About the Gender Pay Gap‘ on The Cut
- Glosswitch, ‘It harms women more than men when dads doing parenting are seen as “babysitters”‘ in The New Statesman
- Bridget Minamore, ‘Can you be a feminist and … ?‘ in The Guardian
- Tobi Oredein, ‘How YouTube became the best place to see black women’s stories‘ on The Pool
- Jennifer Tamyayo, ‘When You Handle Poison‘ in Mice Magazine
- Mona Eltahawy, ‘How to Fight the Patriarchy‘ on Literary Hub
- Ruth Whippman, ‘Sorry, but people need to stop telling women they shouldn’t apologise‘ on The Pool
- Maura Quint, ‘How to Negotiate a Raise (If You’re a Woman)‘ on McSweeney’s
- Eve Barlow, ‘Grimes: I’m not a victim of sexism, I’m a successful producer‘ on The Pool
- Tali Mendelberg and Christopher F. Karpowitz, ‘Are Women the Silent Sex?‘ in The Boston Review
- Jia Tolentino, ‘How ‘Empowerment’ Became Something for Women to Buy‘ in The New York Times
- Isabel Rogers, ‘Top Ten Totty Tips‘ on her blog
Society and Politics:
- Graciela Mochkofsky, ‘The Faithful‘ in The California Sunday Magazine
- Anna Wiener, ‘Uncanny Valley‘ in n+1
- Juleyka Lantigua-Williams, ‘‘Ban the Box’ Goes to College‘ on The Atlantic
- Jacqueline Rose, ‘Who Do You Think You Are?‘ in The London Review of Books
- Megha Majumdar, ‘Half-Truth and Reconciliation: After the Rwandan Genocide‘ on Literary Hub
- Eleanor Margolis, ‘When it comes to Labour and anti-Semitism, there’s only so much this left-wing Jew can suck it up‘ in The New Statesman
- Abby Rabinowitz, ‘The trouble with renting a womb‘ in The Guardian
- Laura Reiley, ‘From Farm to Fable‘ on Tampa Bay
- Aminatta Forna, ‘The Modern and the Medieval Collide: on Ebola‘ on Literary Hub
- Hope Jahren, ‘On Earth Day, Let Lab Girl Persuade You to Plant a Tree‘ on Slate
- Brigid Delaney, ‘The generation gap is dead. But is the result freedom or oppression?‘ in The Guardian
- Suzanne Moore, ‘A generation of artists were wiped out by Aids and we barely talk about it‘ in The Guardian
- Chimene Suleyman, ‘There’s an epidemic of missing people of colour who aren’t photogenic enough for us to find‘ in The Independent
- Kendra James, ‘A Black Girl’s Manual to Attending a New England Boarding School‘ in The Toast
- Rebecca Traister, ‘Could Hillary Clinton Ever Have Imagined This?‘ on The Cut
- Lisa Owens, ‘Is this the worst question you can ask someone?‘ on The Pool
- Laurie Goodstein, ‘Sex Abuse and the Catholic Church: Why Is It Still a Story?‘ in The New York Times
Film, Television, Music, Art, Fashion and Sport:
- Helen O’Hara, ‘25 years on from Thelma and Louise, its spirit of rebellion lives on‘ on The Pool
- Soleil Ho, ‘The Jungle Book’s Complicated Relationship with Imperialism‘ in Bitch
- Suzanne Moore, ‘The Hillsborough verdict shatters the fantasy that class war doesn’t exist‘ in The Guardian
- Anna Silman, ‘Damn, It’s a Good Time for Funny Women on TV‘ on The Cut
- Francine Prose, ‘The Ballad of Slippin’ Jimmy‘ in The New York Review of Books
- Kelly Kanayama, ‘Hollywood’s upcoming films prove it loves Asian culture – as long as it comes without Asians‘ on Media Diversified
- Ana Leszkiewicz, ‘The outrageous sexism on The Island with Bear Grylls might be what makes it a great show‘ in The New Statesman
The interviews/profiles:
- Rebecca Schiff on Electric Literature
- Emily Skillings on the Huffington Post
- Paula Hawkins in The Guardian
- Mylo Freeman on The Pool
- Joanna Walsh on The Literary Sofa
- Shirley Barrett on Electric Literature
- Maggie Mitchell on One Book Lane
- Louise Erdrich in The New York Times
- Susanna Donato on Okey Panky
- Sarai Walker in The Guardian
- Jillian Keenan on Longreads
- Angela Flournoy on Buzzfeed
- Camille Rankine on Grazing Grain Press
- Curtis Sittenfeld on The Millions
- Emma Cline on Publishers Weekly
- Laurie Penny on The Bailey’s Prize blog
- Lisa Owens on Bookanista and in The Bookseller
- Linda Legters on Bloom
- Mary Beard in The Guardian
- Deborah Levy on Foyles’ blog
- Tammy Cohen on The Prime Writers
- Ann Goldstein in Asymptote
- Sara Pascoe on Huffington Post
- Emily O’Neill on Vagabond City
- Joanne Harris on Waterstones
- Jenni Fagan on The Skinny
- Deborah Install on Rebecca Mascull’s blog
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
- Sophie Heawood in The Guardian
- Eva Wiseman in The Observer
- Tracey Thorn in The New Statesman
- Chimene Suleyman and Maya Goodfellow on Media Diversified
- Josie Pickens on Ebony
- Bridget Christie in The Guardian
- Lizzy Kremer on Publishing for Humans
- Juno Dawson in Glamour
- Kashana Cauley on Catapult
- Louise O’Neill in the Irish Examiner
Amazing round-up as always – gives me about eleventy-million hours worth of reading 😁 Didn’t know Jessie Burton had a new book out – not sure how I missed that news!
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