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Showing posts with label fact checking. Show all posts
Showing posts with label fact checking. Show all posts

Thursday, November 16, 2023

"Do mainstream news outlets like Fox, NBC, CBS etc even have a fact checking department anymore? ..." Susan Muaddi Darraj

 "Do mainstream news outlets like Fox, NBC, CBS etc even have a fact checking department anymore? 

 Or do they just let everything that "sounds correct" (i.e. fits the stereotype already in their head) get airtime?"

 
Susan Muaddi Darraj’s new novel, BEHIND YOU IS THE SEA, will be published in January 2024 by HarperVia. Her previous short story collection, A Curious Land: Stories from Home, was named the winner of the AWP Grace Paley Prize for Short Fiction, judged by Jaime Manrique. The book was published in December 2015 by the University of Massachusetts Press. It also won the 2016 Arab American Book Award, a 2016 American Book Award, and was shortlisted for a Palestine Book Award. Her previous short story collection, The Inheritance of Exile, was published in 2007 by University of Notre Dame Press.

In 2019, she launched the viral #TweetYourThobe social media campaign to promote Palestinian culture. Later that year, she was named winner of the Rose Nader Award, by the American Arab Anti-Discrimination Committee (ADC), an award given by the Nader family to a person who “demonstrates an unwavering dedication and commitment to values of equality and justice.”

  [AS ALWAYS PLEASE GO TO THE LINK TO READ GOOD ARTICLES or quotes IN FULL: HELP SHAPE ALGORITHMS (and conversations) THAT EMPOWER DECENCY, DIGNITY, JUSTICE & PEACE... and hopefully Palestine] 

Sunday, March 18, 2012

Palestinian-American author and poet Ibtisam Barakat

Ibtisam Barakat

Sunday, March 18, 2012

For Palestinian-American author and poet Ibtisam Barakat, writing is not just a pursuit — it is almost a fever. "I don't think I can think without writing," she said, scratching her pen in a small notebook even as she spoke. She writes "every minute, every hour." Writing her thoughts, she said, brings her to her real self and makes those thoughts truly her own.

Barakat grew up in the West Bank under periods of Israeli-Palestinian conflict. Her first visit to the United States was as an intern for the magazine The Nation, and she eventually earned two master's degrees — in journalism and human development — from the University of Missouri. Her 2007 young adult memoir, "Tasting the Sky," propelled her to national recognition. In the novel, she recalls her family's escape to Jordan in wartime, their eventual return to Ramallah and the events that unfolded during the family's stay in Barakat's favorite childhood home. Stealing sweet pastries from a vendor's cart, running shoeless from gunfire, adopting the family goat as a pet, spying on Israeli soldiers with her brothers, making friends with the Arabic letter Alef, whom she believed lived in pieces of chalk — all of these are described in a winsome, honest childhood voice.

Barakat had to let other voices inside herself recede and allow her childhood voice to speak when she wrote "Tasting the Sky," she said. "I negotiate my life through writing, so I used writing to heal that past in important ways, to tell it against much silence in myself and in the world about childhood and war."

She added that children have much to say, but their voices often are suppressed or ignored.

The writer first met staff from The Nation while they were on a visit to Palestine, and then-Editor-in-Chief Victor Navasky invited her to participate in an internship at the magazine. The best skill she learned there, Barakat acknowledged, was fact-checking. "It is as though every piece of information is on trial until fact-checked enough. There is responsibility and great pride in that practice," she said. Even now, she checks her written facts against three different sources....READ MORE

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