
The Michael Shermer Show Who Gets to Edit Culture? Sensitivity Readers & Censorship in Book Publishing
Feb 26, 2026
Adam Szetela, a literary scholar (Ph.D. Cornell) who studies publishing, culture wars, and free speech, discusses how outrage and social media reshape book publishing. He explains sensitivity readers, risk management, and how a few loud actors can drive institutional caution. The conversation maps reputational threats, apology dynamics, and why incentives often favor safety or spectacle.
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Small Elite Voices Drive Big Publisher Reactions
- Controversies often stem from a small, highly credentialed group, not a mass movement.
- Publishers respond because critics like Roxane Gay have large followings who amplify complaints and raise reputational stakes.
Sensitivity Reader Accused Then Attacked
- A sensitivity reader accused a Chinese American author's manuscript of racism and the publisher canceled the book.
- The sensitivity reader, himself a writer, later faced attacks for not being sensitive enough, illustrating the mob cycle.
Culture Wars Substitute For Political Power
- Cultural activism often substitutes for political power when activists see electoral defeat.
- Szetela calls this a funneling of energy into cultural battles like removing books or logos because macro political institutions seem out of reach.





