American writer and culture critic
Soraya Nadia McDonald is an American writer and culture critic . She was previously a reporter at The Washington Post , and has been the culture critic for The Undefeated since 2016. McDonald was a finalist for the 2020 Pulitzer Prize for Criticism .[ 1] [ 2]
Life and career
McDonald was raised in North Carolina.[ 3] Her father is African American and her mother is a Sephardic Jew , born in Suriname and raised in Amsterdam, the Netherlands .[ 4] McDonald received her Bachelor of Arts degree from Howard University ,[ 5] [ 6] during which she interned for the high school sports desk at The Washington Post . She returned to the Post after graduation as a staff reporter[ 3] and left in January 2016 to work as the senior culture writer for The Undefeated .[ 5]
McDonald's writing covers pop culture, sports, race, gender, and sexuality.[ 1] She frequently focuses her criticism on the intersection of art and race and has written on topics such as the weaknesses of a post-racial Gilead in The Handmaid's Tale ,[ 7] and the racial anxiety of BlackAF .[ 8] McDonald often critiques the nature of American theater's engagement with the topic of race[ 9] and has written about shows such as Choir Boy , White Noise , and Slave Play .[ 10] On May 4, 2020, she was named a finalist for the 2020 Pulitzer Prize for Criticism .[ 2] McDonald appeared on the podcast Storybound in 2021 to read one of the essays that earned her nomination, Wandering In Search of Wakanda , with music sampled from Marco Pavé.[ 11]
McDonald is also a commentator on current events such as the implications of racial disparities in COVID-19 cases.[ 12] Her work has appeared in and been cited in books and journalistic outlets such as NPR , Vox , and Elle .[ 13] [ 14] [ 15]
In 2020, she contributed a chapter to the volume Believe Me edited by Jessica Valenti and Jaclyn Friedman .[ 16]
Awards and honors
References
^ a b c "Vernon Jarrett Medal to be Presented to New York Times Reporter For Her Work in Coverage Of Hate Crime, Race, and Identity" . Morgan State University Newsroom . Retrieved January 29, 2020 .
^ a b c "2020 Pulitzer Prize Winners & Finalists" . The Pulitzer Prizes . Retrieved May 4, 2020 .
^ a b "Episode 13: A candid conversation with Washington Post reporter Soraya McDonald - Behind the Prose" . April 13, 2015. Retrieved January 29, 2020 .
^ McDonald, Soraya Nadia (July 17, 2020). "I'm a Jew of color. I won't be quiet about anti-Semitism" . Andscape . Retrieved July 17, 2020 .
^ a b "The intersection of race, sports and culture: Kevin Merida and The Undefeated" . Columbia Journalism Review . Retrieved January 29, 2020 .
^ 2006 - Howard University Commencement Program - website Digital Howard @ Howard University
^ Bastién, Angelica Jade (June 14, 2017). "In Its First Season, The Handmaid's Tale Greatest Failing Is How It Handles Race" . Vulture . Retrieved May 5, 2020 .
^ Ibrahim, Shamira (April 26, 2020). "What Kenya Barris Doesn't Understand About '#BlackAF' " . The Atlantic . Retrieved May 5, 2020 .
^ "Online cultural critic wins 2019-20 Nathan Award" . Cornell Chronicle . Retrieved May 5, 2020 .
^ Seymour, Lee. "Why The Pulitzer Win For 'A Strange Loop' Is Historic—On Multiple Levels" . Forbes . Retrieved May 5, 2020 .
^ "Soraya Nadia McDonald Reads Her Essay 'Wandering in Search of Wakanda' " . Literary Hub . February 2, 2021. Retrieved March 29, 2021 .
^ "Racial Disparities Emerge During Epidemics — Like The 1918 Flu" . NPR.org . Retrieved April 30, 2020 .
^ VanDerWerff, Emily Todd (December 31, 2019). "Culture in the 2010s was obsessed with finding community — and building walls" . Vox . Retrieved January 29, 2020 .
^ "TV Critics Give Their Under-The-Radar Picks" . NPR.org . Retrieved January 29, 2020 .
^ Hall, Chloe; Webb, Alysha (November 29, 2017). "What Meghan Markle's Royal Engagement Means to 16 Black Women" . ELLE . Retrieved January 29, 2020 .
^ Valenti, Jessica; Friedman, Jaclyn (February 5, 2019). Believe Me . Basic Books. ISBN 9781580058797 .
^ BWW News Desk. "Soraya Nadia McDonald is This Year's Winner of the George Jean Nathan Award for Dramatic Criticism" . BroadwayWorld.com . Retrieved January 29, 2020 .
External links