Caitlin Zaloom is a founding editor of Public Books. She is also a cultural anthropologist, professor of Social and Cultural Analysis at New York University, and a fellow of the Canadian Institute for Advanced Research. Her most recent book is Indebted: How Families Make College Work at Any Cost (Princeton University Press, 2020).

Caitlin Zaloom
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Writing on Public Books
“We’re Losing a Sense That We Made Them”: Webb Keane on AI and Human Morality
“We can’t fully grasp what’s new about it unless we also understand what we’ve seen before.”
“Dignity Matters as Much as Material Needs”: Michèle Lamont on Recognition Claims and Understanding American Politics
“To recognize the existence of injuries requires the recognition of others and their dignity.”
“It Is Not How You Feel”: Batja Mesquita on How Different Cultures Experience Emotions
“We define ourselves more by certain emotions. I’ve never heard anybody say, ‘I’m trying to get over my embarrassment and I feel so inauthentic.'”
Migrant Lives, Global Stories
How can migrants speak? And what can listening to them reveal about the system of national sovereignty, the persistence of legal exclusion, and the longing for home?
Public Thinker: Hua Hsu on Reading until You See Double
“When I write, I try to begin from a place of authority and then I try to lose it over time. I want to transfer it to the reader.”[none-for-homepage]
Public Thinker: Thomas Frank on How Populism Can Save America
“A relentless assault on received orthodoxies has the effect of making you unpopular with the people for whom those received orthodoxies are orthodox.”[none-for-homepage]
“Bright Lines”: a Discussion Guide
The First Lady of New York City recently gave local booklovers something to celebrate. Over the next year, Gracie Mansion, the mayor’s residence, will open its doors to several lucky residents for a book club series hosted by Chirlane McCray herself. The Gracie Book Club kicks off on May 17th with Tanwi Nandini Islam’s Bright Lines (2015), a […]















