
The New Yorker Radio Hour Zadie Smith on Politics, Turning Fifty, and Mind Control
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Oct 24, 2025 Zadie Smith, an award-winning novelist and essayist known for her debut, White Teeth, explores the intersection of technology and politics. She discusses her new essay collection, Dead and Alive, highlighting how digital platforms manipulate our thoughts and political discourse. Smith provocatively argues that acknowledging this manipulation is crucial for understanding our society. She reflects on the evolution of her writing, the importance of essays in her creative process, and the need for regulating children's screen time, framing it as a collective responsibility.
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Fiction's Diffuse Authority
- She argues fiction's voice is diffuse and can't be reduced to legalistic representation rules.
- Smith resists the idea that writers must only 'stay in their lane' and defends imaginative range.
Hurt By One-Way Appropriation Claims
- Smith recalls interviews where no one accused her of appropriating a white male character in On Beauty.
- She felt hurt that appropriation critiques only seemed to travel one way toward marginalized authors.
Thinking Structurally Like Woolf
- Smith admires Virginia Woolf's structural thinking, especially about institutional advantages.
- She highlights Room Of One's Own as a model for analyzing systemic support for genius.








