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Sarah Wildman

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Sarah Wildman in 2014.

Sarah Wildman is an American journalist and non-fiction writer.

Life

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Wildman is currently a staff editor and writer for Opinion at the New York Times.[1] She was a Milena Jesenska Journalism Fellow at the Institute for Human Sciences. She won the Peter R. Weitz Prize from the German Marshall Fund.[2][3] She was a senior correspondent for the American Prospect.[4] She was a visiting scholar at the Paul H. Nitze School of Advanced International Studies.[5][6] Her work has appeared in The Forward,[7] The Guardian,[8] Slate,[9] and The New Yorker.[10] She is the author of Paper Love: The Search for the Girl My Grandfather Left Behind, a 'third generation' Holocaust memoir that "answers questions about how we can find new ways to talk about the Holocaust and its memory."[11]

Speaking out about sexual harassment

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Wildman previously worked as assistant editor of The New Republic while Marty Peretz was the owner and editor. In 2017, she wrote that another editor, Leon Wieseltier, harassed her and that she was fired in retaliation for complaining: "In disclosing this incident to my superiors, the outcome was, in many ways, far worse than the act itself. It’s not exactly that I was disbelieved; it’s that in the end, I was dismissed", she wrote in Vox.[12]

Wildman wrote that the sexual harassment went hand in hand with gender discrimination at the magazine during Peretz's tenure: "The women knew we had a far shallower chance of rising up the masthead than our male counterparts; all of us hoped we’d be the exception. To do so, we entered into a game in which the rules were rigged against us, sometimes pushing us well past our point of comfort in order to remain in play."[12]

Works

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  • Amy Sohn; Sarah Wildman (23 February 2004). Sex and the City: Kiss and Tell. Simon and Schuster. ISBN 978-0-7434-5730-9.
  • Paper Love: Searching for the Girl My Grandfather Left Behind. Penguin Publishing Group. 30 October 2014. ISBN 978-1-101-61616-1.[13][14]

References

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  1. ^ "Laura Reston and Sarah Wildman Join the Opinion Politics Team". The New York Times Company. 2021-07-09. Retrieved 2022-11-29.
  2. ^ "Tantor Media - Sarah Wildman". tantor.com.
  3. ^ "Sarah Wildman on Paper Love: Searching - Miami Book Fair International". miamibookfair.com.
  4. ^ "Sarah Wildman". The American Prospect.
  5. ^ "Sarah Wildman". pbs.org.
  6. ^ "About us - Pulitzer Center". Pulitzer Center.
  7. ^ "Sarah Wildman". The Forward.
  8. ^ Sarah Wildman. "Sarah Wildman". the Guardian.
  9. ^ "Sarah Wildman". salon.com.
  10. ^ "Sarah Wildman - The New Yorker". The New Yorker.
  11. ^ "Briefly Noted". The New Yorker. 2014-12-15. Retrieved 2022-11-29.
  12. ^ a b Wildman, Sarah. "I was harassed at the New Republic. I spoke up. Nothing happened.". Vox, Nov. 9, 2017.
  13. ^ Bolton-Fasman, Judy (November 14, 2014). "'Paper Love' by Sarah Wildman". Boston Globe. Retrieved 4 May 2015. At the outset of Wildman's carefully packed narrative she tells her readers that her grandfather was "entirely absorbed in the idea of the Jew in History and where he himself fit into that." In telling Valy's story, Wildman also looks for her place in Jewish history by "investigating the narratives at the edges, stories that asked questions of what happened to regular people, the minor stories, the warp and weave of tragedy.
  14. ^ Paperny, Tanya (November 3, 2014). "In Sarah Wildman's First Book, a Grandfather's Letters Become a Personal Holocaust Story". Washington City Paper. Retrieved 4 May 2015.
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External audio
audio icon Box Of Love Letters Reveals Grandfather Didn't Escape WWII With 'Everyone', NPR, November 25, 2014