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Read an Excerpt from Waste

Waste, activist Catherine Coleman Flowers's new memoir traces her evolution from country girl to student civil rights organizer to environmental justice champion. Flowers has fought for basic sanitation in her home community of Lowndes County, Alabama and in communities across the country, an issue that lies at the intersection of health, environmental, economic, and social justice.

Author Spotlight: A Conversation with Catherine Coleman Flowers

2020 MacArthur Fellow Catherine Coleman Flowers's work fighting for basic sanitation addresses some of the most pressing issues of our time—public health, environmental, economic, and racial justice. It began in in her home community of Lowndes County, Alabama, a county that has a long, turbulent, and bloody history of racial injustice, and has expanded to communities across the United States.

Abandoned by Anne Kim awarded the Goddard Riverside Stephan Russo Book Prize for Social Justice

Anne Kim's Abandoned: America’s Lost Youth and the Crisis of Disconnection has won the 2020 Goddard Riverside Stephan Russo Book Prize for Social Justice.

Author Events Replay: August & September 2020

We might not be able meet in the real world, but online events have been able to bring more of us together and have provided an opportunity for far-flung conversations. Attending an event with your favorite author is no longer constrained by time or location. Readers can join live conversations halfway across the world or watch recordings after they’ve had a chance to finish reading a book.

Author Spotlight: A Conversation with Andrew Gumbel

A college education has long been touted as a path to success, but earning a degree and navigating the bureaucracy of the institutions that grant them can be fraught for many students, especially first-generation, minority, and low-income students. Georgia State University isn't one of those institutions. Over the past decade Georgia State University has upended the conventional wisdom that large numbers of students are doomed to fail simply because of their economic background or the color of their skin.

Champions of Literacy, an online event with Literacy Partners

Literacy Partners, an adult education non-profit based in New York City with programs across the country, is hosting a series of online events focusing on racial and social justice. On October 23rd at 7:00 pm ET, Literary Partners will host “Champions of Literacy,” an event celebrating the New York Times Magazine’s 1619 Project. This ongoing project has worked to reframe U.S.

The Story of the Chicago Seven and the Infamous 1969 Trial

Aaron Sorkin’s new film The Trial of the Chicago 7 releases for streaming on Netflix this Friday, October 16th. It tells the story of the seven people who faced conspiracy charges after the uprising at the 1968 Democratic National Convention in Chicago and the trial that followed.

A Ngũgĩ wa Thiong'o Reading List

Ngũgĩ wa Thiong’o is one of the giants of contemporary literature. Writing primarily in Gikuyu, his writing spans genre and form—from novels to criticism, memoir to plays—and has been praised from the likes of President Barack Obama, the New York Times Book Review, The Guardian, and others. To celebrate the publication of his new novel The Perfect Nine, we thought we would share a reading list of some of Ngũgĩ's notable works.

 

New Press Authors Among the 2020 MacArthur Fellows

Every year the MacArthur Foundation announces a new class of fellows. Sometimes referred to as a “genius grant,” a MacArthur Fellowship goes to recpients at the top of their respective fields. They are the creators, thinkers, and doers, who, through their extraordinary dedication and originality, have made huge impacts in their disciplines and in the culture. The New Press is thrilled to see two of our authors among the 2020 MacArthur Fellows.

 

Happy Birthday Andrea Dworkin! A Timeline of Dworkin's Life and Work

One of the most controversial and iconoclastic feminists of the twentieth century, Andrea Dworkin was born on this day in 1946. Over a decade after her passing in 2005, her work has taken on renewed importance in the wake of #MeToo, raising new questions about how we navigate sex, power, gender, and consent. Earlier this month, The New Press released Andrea Dworkin: The Feminist as Revolutionary, an intimate and thoroughly researched biography by leading LGBT scholar Martin Duberman. 

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