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Wikipedia

Dawn Foster

Dawn Hayley Foster (12 September 1986 – 9 July 2021)[2] was an Irish-British journalist, broadcaster, and author writing predominantly on social affairs, politics, economics and women's rights. Foster held staff writer positions at Inside Housing, The Guardian, and Jacobin magazine,[3] and contributed to other journals such as The Independent,[4] The New York Times,[5] Tribune,[6] and Dissent.[7] She regularly appeared as a political commentator on television[8] and was known for her coverage of the Grenfell Tower fire.[2]

Dawn Foster
Foster in 2018
BornDawn Hayley Foster[1]
(1986-09-12)12 September 1986[2]
Newport, Wales
Died9 July 2021 (aged 34)
London, England
OccupationWriter, broadcaster
Alma materUniversity of Warwick

Early life and education edit

Foster was born in and grew up in Newport, South Wales.[2] She also had a background in Belfast and held dual British and Irish citizenship.[9] In articles for Child Poverty Action Group and The Guardian, she wrote that she grew up in poverty in an unemployed family. In 2017, Foster detailed early experiences of hunger and sleeping rough for the Food Memory Bank project.

She attended Caerleon Comprehensive School and Bassaleg High School before going on to study English literature at the University of Warwick.[10] Before going into journalism, Foster worked in politics and higher education.[11]

Journalism edit

Foster held staff writer positions at Inside Housing, The Guardian, and Jacobin magazine. She was co-editor of openDemocracy 50:50[11] and wrote for numerous publications including The New York Times, Tribune, and the London Review of Books.

The Guardian edit

The success of Foster's blog on the harassment of female cyclists led to her first commission at The Guardian in 2010.[12] In 2011, Foster was appointed as a moderator on The Guardian Comment is Free website and became a regular contributor to its opinion section.[12]

Foster's career at The Guardian continued with regular columns including Foster on Friday[13] for the Housing Network, opinion columns, and her work for The Guardian's Society desk. Her work at The Guardian predominantly covered social affairs, politics, economics and women's rights. Her tenure at The Guardian came to an end in mid-2019 after she wrote an opinion piece criticising then deputy leader of the Labour Party Tom Watson and suggesting he should quit.[9][14]

Inside Housing edit

After working on The Guardian's comment moderation desk and writing opinion, Foster worked as deputy features editor at Inside Housing from 2014 to 2015. Her work there includes reports into hoarding,[15] interviews with social geographer Danny Dorling[16] and Welsh politician Tanni Grey-Thompson,[17] and investigations into how periods impact homeless women.[18]

Inside Housing colleagues described Foster as "brave and bold" and a "brilliant journalist."[19]

It was during Foster's role at Inside Housing that International Building Press organisation named her 2014's IBP new journalist of the year.[20]

London Review of Books letter to Toby Young edit

In 2015, the London Review of Books' cover story for its 7 May issue was an article written by Foster criticising the free school movement. In it, Foster wrote: "There is no requirement that free school founders have experience of running a school, and no assessment is made as to whether the prospective founders will be able to meet the legally required standards of school governance." The article drew criticism from free schools advocate and journalist Toby Young. In a letter to the London Review of Books, Young took issue with Foster's interpretation of free schools data and made claims that were challenged by the author Michael Rosen, journalist Melissa Benn, and education researcher Janet Downs in further letters written to the publication. Foster responded to Young in the London Review of Books' Letters refuting Young's criticism and wrote:

Creaming off the children of more affluent parents constitutes social segregation; so too does the existence of religious free schools. Young seems to think he is held in high regard by free school advocates. When I mentioned his name in the course of interviewing a former Department for Education employee for the piece, my interviewee headbutted the restaurant table in exasperation. I have found the sentiment, if not the gesture, to be common among his ideological comrades.[21][22]

Grenfell Tower fire edit

On the night of the Grenfell Tower fire, "[Foster] headed over to do what she could as Grenfell Tower was engulfed in flames, and went on to unearth a blog post written by former residents of the tower warning that the recent refurbishment could cause a 'serious fire'."[12] Her coverage of the fire included an opinion piece in The New York Times, in which she wrote the following:

"the level of public anger right now since the Grenfell disaster is forcing people here to confront the issues of class and race, gentrification and public policy that, it is now clear, can be deadly."[5]

On the day of the fire, Jacobin magazine published an article by Foster on the fire. She called the tragedy an "atrocity" that "was explicitly political" and "a symbol of the United Kingdom's deep inequality".[23]

A tribute to Foster by the writer Juliet Jacques wrote that Foster, "reported on [the Grenfell Tower fire] relentlessly, criticising the way the building's management company and the local council had ignored the residents' concerns".[24]

One year on from the Grenfell fire, Foster discussed the political aftermath and the survivors' struggle for justice with writer and editor James Butler on Novara Media.[25]

2018 Conservative Party Conference edit

Whilst attending the 2018 Conservative party conference, Foster uncovered an oversight in the event's mobile app that allowed any user to access personal details and phone numbers of attendees including Boris Johnson and senior members of Theresa May's cabinet. The story went viral online and resulted in an apology and investigation from the Information Commissioner.[12]

Criticism of an MP's use of the phrase "Cultural Marxism" edit

In 2019, the Conservative Member of Parliament, Suella Braverman, said in a pro-Brexit speech for the Bruges Group (a Eurosceptic think tank): "We are engaged in a war against cultural Marxism" and warned about free speech at universities in the UK. Journalists present at the event included Foster who challenged Braverman's use of the term 'cultural Marxism' highlighting its anti-Semitic history and its connection to the manifesto of mass murderer Anders Breivik. Braverman responded, "Yes, I do believe that we are in a fight against cultural Marxism. We have a culture evolving from the far left which is about snuffing out freedom of speech." Braverman's usage of the conspiracy theory was condemned as hate speech by other MPs,[which?] and the anti-racist organisation Hope Not Hate.[26][27][28]

Support of transgender rights edit

Foster wrote numerous articles against transphobia in British media[29][30] and was one of more than 200 feminists who signed a letter to The Guardian in 2020 rejecting the argument that transgender rights are a threat to women.[31]

In 2019, Foster criticised anti-transgender activist Graham Linehan and others who allegedly engaged in targeted harassment of an NSPCC employee after the charity hired British model and activist Munroe Bergdorf, a transgender woman. Foster called the online abuse "transphobic" and "flatly homophobic".[32]

In 2020, Foster received transphobic emails and threats for her support of the transgender rights movement.[33] Foster told PinkNews:

"It's been awful to see the rhetoric around trans issues dragged back to the 80s by a handful of obsessive, middle-class newspaper columnists, the bloke who wrote Father Ted and then failed to be funny ever again, cheered on by internet-obsessed women on Mumsnet."[34]

Ireland edit

Foster often wrote and made commentary on Irish politics and social issues, particularly in the north.[9][35] A believer in Irish reunification, she attended Sinn Féin public meetings. She was described as "one of the few working-journalists in Britain who intimately understood Ireland" in An Phoblacht.[36]

Media appearances edit

Television edit

Foster made regular appearances as a political commentator on television including Sky News, Channel 4 News,[37] and the BBC including BBC Newsnight[38] and BBC News.[39]

Radio and podcasts edit

Foster also regularly appeared on radio and podcasts in Britain and America. She was a frequent guest on Novara Media and made appearances to discuss austerity,[40] politics,[41][42] and housing in Britain.[43] Between 2020 and 2021, Foster also appeared on talkRADIO.[44]

In 2017, Foster appeared on The Independent's Double Take podcast to discuss solutions to Britain's housing emergency.[citation needed]

In 2020, the London Review Bookshop podcast released a conversation between Foster and the author Lynsey Hanley discussing Hanley's book Estates.[45] Hanley and Foster also discussed class in an episode released in 2016.[46] Other appearances on the London Review Bookshop podcast include Foster's 2017 conversation with the American poet and author Patricia Lockwood.[47][48]

Recorded panels edit

Recordings of Foster's appearances at The World Transformed include a 2016 panel titled "Building a Radical Media"[48] and a 2018 panel titled "Tribune: the relaunch",[49] organised by Tribune magazine.

In 2016, Foster took part in the Fawcett Society's 150th anniversary celebrations on a panel discussing feminism.[50]

Books edit

Lean Out edit

Foster's first book, Lean Out, was published in January 2016 by Repeater Books. In Foster's obituary in The Guardian Lean Out was described as "a rebuttal of Sheryl Sandberg's argument that corporate women could succeed by 'leaning in' to their careers, it skewered what Dawn called the 'self help' approach of corporate feminism."[12]

In January 2016, Foster was interviewed about Lean Out's politics by The Huffington Post. In it she discussed the book's response to Lean In: Women, Work, and the Will to Lead, a 2013 book co-written by Sheryl Sandberg, the chief operating officer of Facebook, and Nell Scovell, a TV and magazine writer. In the interview, Foster said.

"the only reason that Sandberg's life is at all possible is because she employs low-paid women to clean her house, do the grocery shopping, look after her children, run her finances... and her advice wouldn't help those women at all."[51]

Foster further discussed her criticism of Lean In and liberal feminism with The Huffington Post:

"The book assumes that women always work in the interests of women, but people aren't male and female and that's it. If Theresa May is a white woman who is very well-educated and very wealthy, she's more likely to act in the interests of, say, a very wealthy white man than she is a working class poor black or immigrant woman."[51]

In March 2016, Foster discussed the book with openDemocracy in a recorded interview titled, "Is capitalism destroying feminism?"[52][53]

Further promotion of Lean Out included a discussion with Zoe Williams at the London Review Bookshop in February 2016.[54] Foster also discussed the book on Novara Media.[55] On 21 September 2018, Foster took part in a three-person panel discussion of Sandberg's book.[56]

Reception edit

Social geographer Danny Dorling wrote, "Rarely does 'essential reading' really mean that you urgently need to read a book. But Lean Out is different." The Independent on Sunday called Lean Out, "A very important, much-needed and well-researched book that isn't afraid to ask the right questions and demand answers. It is a straight-talking, timely call to arms." In Times Higher Education, writer and academic Shahidha Bari wrote that the book was, "Vigorous...trenchant...a robust critique...its conclusion is both inevitable and startling." The Huffington Post wrote that it was, "Fascinating, thought-provoking and at times outrage-inducing."[57][58]

In 2017, Lean Out was shortlisted for the Bread and Roses book award.[59]

Incomplete works edit

According to Foster's obituary in The Guardian, she had been working on a second book, Where Will We Live?, about the history of and solutions to the housing crisis: she had one chapter left to write before being sidelined by illness.[2] According to her biography in the London Review of Books, she was working on another book, a cultural history of the dole.[60]

Personal life edit

As a child, Foster practised Taekwondo.[61]

At the end of her life, Foster was based in South West London. She was a Roman Catholic.[62] In 2019, Foster wrote in The Guardian about rediscovering her faith after speaking to survivors of the Grenfell Tower fire.[63]

Foster's volunteer work included the Christmases she spent volunteering for homeless charities with ties to her church.[12]

Foster had epilepsy and schwannomatosis, and wrote about her experience of disabilities and disability rights.[64][65]

Death edit

Foster's friends and colleagues announced her death on 15 July 2021, at the age of 34. Foster had been discharged from hospital on 9 July and was found in her home, having died suddenly of complications related to her long-term health problems.[66]

Tributes were paid by fellow political commentators and journalists on social media as well as a number of politicians, including Jeremy Corbyn, Mary Lou McDonald, Angela Rayner, and John McDonnell.[67]

Legacy edit

In July 2021, South Wales Argus reported on a fundraiser for a memorial bench for Foster in Newport.[68]

Housmans bookshop edit

 
Some of Dawn Foster's books at the Housman's memorial sale.

In October 2021, the radical, London-based bookshop Housmans announced that Foster's private library had been donated to the bookshop by Foster's next of kin. Each book was stamped with the imprint 'DAWN FOSTER FOREVER – From the library of Dawn Foster 1986–2021."[69][70]

Dawn Foster Memorial Essay Prize edit

In November 2021, the Dawn Foster Memorial Essay Prize was launched in her memory by HCI Skills Gateway in partnership with Red Pepper magazine.[71][72][73] In 2022, this prize was awarded to Jessica Field's essay on #SaveOurHomesLS26: a resident action group in Leeds campaigning to save their prefabricated tenanted homes.[74] The winning essay and the shortlisted entries were published by Red Pepper magazine.[75]

Bibliography edit

  • Lean Out Repeater Books, 2016.ISBN 9781910924020[76]

Awards and influence edit

  • The International Building Press Prize for Young Journalist of the Year, 2014.[20]
  • Non-traditional journalist of the year, Words by Women awards, 2016.[77]
  • Shortlisted for Scoop of the Year, The International Building Press Prize, 2016.[78]
  • Longlisted for the Orwell Prize for Exposing Britain's Social Evils, 2017.[79]
  • Shortlisted for the Bread and Roses Award, 2017.[80]
  • Number 82 in "The 100 Most Influential People on the Left" by political commentator Iain Dale, 2017.[81]
  • One of the most respected journalists by journalists in the Journalists at Work survey by the National Council for the Training of Journalists, 2018.[82]

References edit

  1. ^ The Poisonous Euros Atmosphere Fan [@DawnHFoster] (23 May 2014). "@chrisbrooke @sianberry (Hayley) And she won her election" (Tweet). from the original on 15 July 2021. Retrieved 19 July 2021 – via Twitter.
  2. ^ a b c d e McCabe, Jess (5 August 2021). "Dawn Foster obituary". The Guardian. Retrieved 5 August 2021.
  3. ^ "Dawn Foster". Jacobin magazine. Retrieved 27 March 2019.
  4. ^ Foster, Dawn. "Articles by Dawn Foster". The Independent. London. Retrieved 5 January 2017.[dead link]
  5. ^ a b Foster, Dawn (20 June 2017). "Would a White British Community Have Burned in Grenfell Tower?". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 29 November 2021.
  6. ^ "Dawn Foster". Tribune. Retrieved 20 January 2019.
  7. ^ "Dawn Foster". Dissent Magazine. Retrieved 3 December 2021.
  8. ^ "Tributes paid to writer Dawn Foster, who has died aged 34". The Guardian. 15 July 2021. Retrieved 3 December 2021.
  9. ^ a b c Hanley, Lynsey (19 July 2021). "We Will Never Forget Dawn Foster". Jacobin.
  10. ^ "Warwick hosts journo conference - The Boar". theboar.org. Retrieved 5 January 2017.
  11. ^ a b "democraciaAbierta". openDemocracy (in Portuguese). 13 December 2013. Retrieved 3 December 2021.
  12. ^ a b c d e f "Dawn Foster obituary". The Guardian. 5 August 2021. Retrieved 29 November 2021.
  13. ^ "Foster on Friday | Housing Network". The Guardian. Retrieved 29 November 2021.
  14. ^ Ramsay, Adam (19 July 2021). "Dawn Foster: A brilliant, working-class trailblazer who inspired a generation". openDemocracy. Retrieved 6 February 2022.
  15. ^ "Inside hoarding". Inside Housing. Retrieved 29 November 2021.
  16. ^ "Danny Dorling, champion of the poor". Inside Housing. Retrieved 29 November 2021.
  17. ^ "Battle of the champion". Inside Housing. Retrieved 29 November 2021.
  18. ^ "The Homeless Period". Inside Housing. Retrieved 29 November 2021.
  19. ^ "The irreplaceable Dawn Foster". Inside Housing. Retrieved 29 November 2021.
  20. ^ a b "Inside Housing scoops four journalism awards". Inside Housing. Retrieved 29 November 2021.
  21. ^ Foster, Dawn (6 May 2015). "Free Schools". London Review of Books. Vol. 37, no. 9. ISSN 0260-9592. Retrieved 6 December 2021.
  22. ^ "Dawn Foster demolishing the arguments for free schools in the London Review of Books". Repeater Books. 12 June 2015. Retrieved 6 December 2021.
  23. ^ "A Very Political Tragedy". Jacobin. Retrieved 29 November 2021.
  24. ^ Jacques, Juliet (23 July 2021). "DAWN FOSTER (1986 - 2021)". artsoftheworkingclass.org. Retrieved 3 March 2022.
  25. ^ "Grenfell: One Year On". Novara Media. Retrieved 29 November 2021.
  26. ^ "The Tory Crisis That Dare Not Speak Its Name". jacobinmag.com. Retrieved 6 December 2021.
  27. ^ "What is cultural Marxism? The alt-right meme in Suella Braverman's speech in Westminster". New Statesman. 7 June 2021. Retrieved 6 December 2021.
  28. ^ Chaplain, Chloe (26 March 2019). "Tory MP Suella Braverman repeats anti-Semitic conspiracy theory". inews.co.uk. Retrieved 6 December 2021.
  29. ^ "The bigoted British media actively endangers trans people". Huck Magazine. 11 November 2017. Retrieved 3 December 2021.
  30. ^ "Trans women are women: Labour is on the right side of history". Huck Magazine. 23 May 2018. Retrieved 24 March 2022.
  31. ^ "Hundreds of feminists write to The Guardian rejecting argument that trans rights threaten women". PinkNews. 5 March 2020. Retrieved 3 December 2021.
  32. ^ "NSPCC employee who hired Munroe Bergdorf gets homophobic abuse". PinkNews. 12 June 2019. Retrieved 6 December 2021.
  33. ^ "Journalist Dawn Foster threatened with rape simply for being a trans ally, showing how vile transphobes truly are". PinkNews. 4 March 2020. Retrieved 3 December 2021.
  34. ^ "Journalist Dawn Foster threatened with rape simply for being a trans ally, showing how vile transphobes truly are". PinkNews. 4 March 2020. Retrieved 3 December 2021.
  35. ^ Foster, Dawn (5 December 2017). "Ireland's Brexit borders: Is this game over for the British government?". Huck. Retrieved 6 February 2022.
  36. ^ Dwyer, Joe (16 July 2021). "Dawn Foster – A tribute". An Phoblacht. Retrieved 6 February 2022.
  37. ^ Daily Mail train ban debate: Mail vs the Guardian columnists, retrieved 29 November 2021
  38. ^ Should the Diana tapes be made public? - BBC Newsnight, retrieved 29 November 2021
  39. ^ Dawn Foster, BBC News 11/10/2019, retrieved 29 November 2021
  40. ^ Austerity Frontline: Interview with Dawn Foster, retrieved 29 November 2021
  41. ^ #NovaraFM: 2018: Review of the Year, retrieved 29 November 2021
  42. ^ #NovaraFM: Sovereignty, Austerity, Nationalism: Britain and Europe, retrieved 29 November 2021
  43. ^ #NovaraFM: Housing – Crisis and Inequality, retrieved 29 November 2021
  44. ^ Dan Wootton: Twitter is a cesspit where freedom of speech and debate comes to die, retrieved 29 November 2021
  45. ^ Lynsey Hanley and Dawn Foster: Estates, 21 December 2020, retrieved 29 November 2021
  46. ^ 'Respectable': Lynsey Hanley and Dawn Foster, 5 May 2016, retrieved 29 November 2021
  47. ^ Priestdaddy: Patricia Lockwood and Dawn Foster, 23 May 2017, retrieved 29 November 2021
  48. ^ a b Building a Radical Media @ The World Transformed w/Glen Greenwald, Paul Mason, Dawn Foster, retrieved 29 November 2021
  49. ^ "Tribune: The Relaunch" at #TWT2018, retrieved 29 November 2021
  50. ^ Generation F: The Feminist Fight from First to Fourth Wave. YouTube. Archived from the original on 11 December 2021.
  51. ^ a b "Dawn Foster Interview: Equality, Misogyny and Leaning Out". HuffPost UK. 20 January 2016. Retrieved 6 December 2021.
  52. ^ "Is capitalism destroying feminism? An interview with Dawn Foster". openDemocracy. Retrieved 6 December 2021.
  53. ^ Is capitalism destroying feminism? An interview with Dawn Foster, retrieved 6 December 2021
  54. ^ Dawn Foster and Zoe Williams on 'Lean Out', retrieved 29 November 2021
  55. ^ Lean Out: In Conversation with Dawn Foster, retrieved 29 November 2021
  56. ^ "Lean In – 3 Perspectives". Eat Sleep Work Repeat. 21 September 2018. Retrieved 6 December 2021.
  57. ^ "Dawn Foster Interview: Equality, Misogyny and Leaning Out". HuffPost UK. 20 January 2016. Retrieved 6 December 2021.
  58. ^ "Lean Out by Dawn Foster: 9781910924020". PenguinRandomhouse.com. Retrieved 6 December 2021.
  59. ^ "Younge and Foster on Bread & Roses shortlist | The Bookseller". www.thebookseller.com. Retrieved 29 November 2021.
  60. ^ "Dawn Foster · LRB". www.lrb.co.uk. Retrieved 5 January 2017.
  61. ^ "Did you go to the same Gwent school as one of these celebrities?". South Wales Argus. 29 January 2021. Retrieved 29 November 2021.
  62. ^ Foster, Dawn (5 February 2018). "Secret Freemasons should have no place in public life". The Guardian. London.
  63. ^ "How rediscovering my faith is helping me cope with a chaotic world". The Guardian. 5 May 2019. Retrieved 3 December 2021.
  64. ^ "#Hospitalglam shows body-positive campaigns work for chronic sickness too". The Guardian. London. 19 January 2015. Retrieved 9 January 2017.
  65. ^ "Those living with disabilities face discrimination every day – we must be more vigilant". Huck Magazine. 5 August 2019. Retrieved 29 November 2021.
  66. ^ Smoke, Ben (23 July 2021). "Dawn Foster Forever". Huck Magazine. Retrieved 29 November 2021.
  67. ^ Moody, Tom (15 July 2021). "Tributes paid to Newport author and journalist Dawn Foster". South Wales Argus. Retrieved 15 July 2021.
  68. ^ "Fundraiser for Dawn Foster memorial bench in Newport smashes target". South Wales Argus. 20 July 2021. Retrieved 29 November 2021.
  69. ^ "Dawn Foster Memorial Library Sale, from 11am Sat 16th October". Housmans Bookshop. 6 October 2021. Retrieved 29 November 2021.
  70. ^ "Bookshop's mark of respect for sale of journalist Dawn Foster's library". South Wales Argus. 11 October 2021. Retrieved 29 November 2021.
  71. ^ "Reactions to racism reports, housing at #COP26 and more in this month's Twitter round-up". Inside Housing. Retrieved 6 December 2021.
  72. ^ "Dawn Foster Memorial Essay Prize". HCI Skills Gateway. Retrieved 29 November 2021.
  73. ^ "Dawn Foster Memorial Essay Prize". HCI Skills Gateway. Retrieved 6 December 2021.
  74. ^ "Fighting for Cardboard City". Retrieved 11 July 2022.
  75. ^ "Dawn Foster memorial essay prize". Retrieved 11 July 2022.
  76. ^ Foster, Dawn (2016). Lean Out. Repeater Books. ISBN 9781910924020. Retrieved 22 July 2021.
  77. ^ "Words By Women awards make their mark with celebration of solidarity". the Guardian. 22 March 2016. Retrieved 29 November 2021.
  78. ^ Waite, Richard (19 October 2016). "AJ shortlisted for six construction media awards". The Architects' Journal. Retrieved 29 November 2021.
  79. ^ "The Orwell Prize Longlist". The Orwell Foundation. 15 March 2017. Retrieved 30 June 2017.
  80. ^ Onwuemezi, Natasha (8 May 2017). "Younge and Foster on Bread & Roses shortlist". The Bookseller. London. Retrieved 30 June 2017.
  81. ^ Dale, Iain (25 September 2017). "The 100 Most Influential People On The Left: Iain Dale's 2017 List". LBC. Retrieved 31 October 2017.
  82. ^ "NCTJ publishes list of most respected journalists". www.nctj.com. Retrieved 3 December 2021.

External links edit

dawn, foster, dawn, hayley, foster, september, 1986, july, 2021, irish, british, journalist, broadcaster, author, writing, predominantly, social, affairs, politics, economics, women, rights, foster, held, staff, writer, positions, inside, housing, guardian, ja. Dawn Hayley Foster 12 September 1986 9 July 2021 2 was an Irish British journalist broadcaster and author writing predominantly on social affairs politics economics and women s rights Foster held staff writer positions at Inside Housing The Guardian and Jacobin magazine 3 and contributed to other journals such as The Independent 4 The New York Times 5 Tribune 6 and Dissent 7 She regularly appeared as a political commentator on television 8 and was known for her coverage of the Grenfell Tower fire 2 Dawn FosterFoster in 2018BornDawn Hayley Foster 1 1986 09 12 12 September 1986 2 Newport WalesDied9 July 2021 aged 34 London EnglandOccupationWriter broadcasterAlma materUniversity of Warwick Contents 1 Early life and education 2 Journalism 2 1 The Guardian 2 2 Inside Housing 2 3 London Review of Books letter to Toby Young 2 4 Grenfell Tower fire 2 5 2018 Conservative Party Conference 2 6 Criticism of an MP s use of the phrase Cultural Marxism 2 7 Support of transgender rights 2 8 Ireland 3 Media appearances 3 1 Television 3 2 Radio and podcasts 3 3 Recorded panels 4 Books 4 1 Lean Out 4 1 1 Reception 4 2 Incomplete works 5 Personal life 6 Death 7 Legacy 7 1 Housmans bookshop 7 2 Dawn Foster Memorial Essay Prize 8 Bibliography 9 Awards and influence 10 References 11 External linksEarly life and education editFoster was born in and grew up in Newport South Wales 2 She also had a background in Belfast and held dual British and Irish citizenship 9 In articles for Child Poverty Action Group and The Guardian she wrote that she grew up in poverty in an unemployed family In 2017 Foster detailed early experiences of hunger and sleeping rough for the Food Memory Bank project She attended Caerleon Comprehensive School and Bassaleg High School before going on to study English literature at the University of Warwick 10 Before going into journalism Foster worked in politics and higher education 11 Journalism editFoster held staff writer positions at Inside Housing The Guardian and Jacobin magazine She was co editor of openDemocracy 50 50 11 and wrote for numerous publications including The New York Times Tribune and the London Review of Books The Guardian edit The success of Foster s blog on the harassment of female cyclists led to her first commission at The Guardian in 2010 12 In 2011 Foster was appointed as a moderator on The Guardian Comment is Free website and became a regular contributor to its opinion section 12 Foster s career at The Guardian continued with regular columns including Foster on Friday 13 for the Housing Network opinion columns and her work for The Guardian s Society desk Her work at The Guardian predominantly covered social affairs politics economics and women s rights Her tenure at The Guardian came to an end in mid 2019 after she wrote an opinion piece criticising then deputy leader of the Labour Party Tom Watson and suggesting he should quit 9 14 Inside Housing edit After working on The Guardian s comment moderation desk and writing opinion Foster worked as deputy features editor at Inside Housing from 2014 to 2015 Her work there includes reports into hoarding 15 interviews with social geographer Danny Dorling 16 and Welsh politician Tanni Grey Thompson 17 and investigations into how periods impact homeless women 18 Inside Housing colleagues described Foster as brave and bold and a brilliant journalist 19 It was during Foster s role at Inside Housing that International Building Press organisation named her 2014 s IBP new journalist of the year 20 London Review of Books letter to Toby Young editIn 2015 the London Review of Books cover story for its 7 May issue was an article written by Foster criticising the free school movement In it Foster wrote There is no requirement that free school founders have experience of running a school and no assessment is made as to whether the prospective founders will be able to meet the legally required standards of school governance The article drew criticism from free schools advocate and journalist Toby Young In a letter to the London Review of Books Young took issue with Foster s interpretation of free schools data and made claims that were challenged by the author Michael Rosen journalist Melissa Benn and education researcher Janet Downs in further letters written to the publication Foster responded to Young in the London Review of Books Letters refuting Young s criticism and wrote Creaming off the children of more affluent parents constitutes social segregation so too does the existence of religious free schools Young seems to think he is held in high regard by free school advocates When I mentioned his name in the course of interviewing a former Department for Education employee for the piece my interviewee headbutted the restaurant table in exasperation I have found the sentiment if not the gesture to be common among his ideological comrades 21 22 Grenfell Tower fire editOn the night of the Grenfell Tower fire Foster headed over to do what she could as Grenfell Tower was engulfed in flames and went on to unearth a blog post written by former residents of the tower warning that the recent refurbishment could cause a serious fire 12 Her coverage of the fire included an opinion piece in The New York Times in which she wrote the following the level of public anger right now since the Grenfell disaster is forcing people here to confront the issues of class and race gentrification and public policy that it is now clear can be deadly 5 On the day of the fire Jacobin magazine published an article by Foster on the fire She called the tragedy an atrocity that was explicitly political and a symbol of the United Kingdom s deep inequality 23 A tribute to Foster by the writer Juliet Jacques wrote that Foster reported on the Grenfell Tower fire relentlessly criticising the way the building s management company and the local council had ignored the residents concerns 24 One year on from the Grenfell fire Foster discussed the political aftermath and the survivors struggle for justice with writer and editor James Butler on Novara Media 25 2018 Conservative Party Conference edit Whilst attending the 2018 Conservative party conference Foster uncovered an oversight in the event s mobile app that allowed any user to access personal details and phone numbers of attendees including Boris Johnson and senior members of Theresa May s cabinet The story went viral online and resulted in an apology and investigation from the Information Commissioner 12 Criticism of an MP s use of the phrase Cultural Marxism edit In 2019 the Conservative Member of Parliament Suella Braverman said in a pro Brexit speech for the Bruges Group a Eurosceptic think tank We are engaged in a war against cultural Marxism and warned about free speech at universities in the UK Journalists present at the event included Foster who challenged Braverman s use of the term cultural Marxism highlighting its anti Semitic history and its connection to the manifesto of mass murderer Anders Breivik Braverman responded Yes I do believe that we are in a fight against cultural Marxism We have a culture evolving from the far left which is about snuffing out freedom of speech Braverman s usage of the conspiracy theory was condemned as hate speech by other MPs which and the anti racist organisation Hope Not Hate 26 27 28 Support of transgender rights edit Foster wrote numerous articles against transphobia in British media 29 30 and was one of more than 200 feminists who signed a letter to The Guardian in 2020 rejecting the argument that transgender rights are a threat to women 31 In 2019 Foster criticised anti transgender activist Graham Linehan and others who allegedly engaged in targeted harassment of an NSPCC employee after the charity hired British model and activist Munroe Bergdorf a transgender woman Foster called the online abuse transphobic and flatly homophobic 32 In 2020 Foster received transphobic emails and threats for her support of the transgender rights movement 33 Foster told PinkNews It s been awful to see the rhetoric around trans issues dragged back to the 80s by a handful of obsessive middle class newspaper columnists the bloke who wrote Father Ted and then failed to be funny ever again cheered on by internet obsessed women on Mumsnet 34 Ireland edit Foster often wrote and made commentary on Irish politics and social issues particularly in the north 9 35 A believer in Irish reunification she attended Sinn Fein public meetings She was described as one of the few working journalists in Britain who intimately understood Ireland in An Phoblacht 36 Media appearances editTelevision edit Foster made regular appearances as a political commentator on television including Sky News Channel 4 News 37 and the BBC including BBC Newsnight 38 and BBC News 39 Radio and podcasts edit Foster also regularly appeared on radio and podcasts in Britain and America She was a frequent guest on Novara Media and made appearances to discuss austerity 40 politics 41 42 and housing in Britain 43 Between 2020 and 2021 Foster also appeared on talkRADIO 44 In 2017 Foster appeared on The Independent s Double Take podcast to discuss solutions to Britain s housing emergency citation needed In 2020 the London Review Bookshop podcast released a conversation between Foster and the author Lynsey Hanley discussing Hanley s book Estates 45 Hanley and Foster also discussed class in an episode released in 2016 46 Other appearances on the London Review Bookshop podcast include Foster s 2017 conversation with the American poet and author Patricia Lockwood 47 48 Recorded panels edit Recordings of Foster s appearances at The World Transformed include a 2016 panel titled Building a Radical Media 48 and a 2018 panel titled Tribune the relaunch 49 organised by Tribune magazine In 2016 Foster took part in the Fawcett Society s 150th anniversary celebrations on a panel discussing feminism 50 Books editLean Out edit Foster s first book Lean Out was published in January 2016 by Repeater Books In Foster s obituary in The Guardian Lean Out was described as a rebuttal of Sheryl Sandberg s argument that corporate women could succeed by leaning in to their careers it skewered what Dawn called the self help approach of corporate feminism 12 In January 2016 Foster was interviewed about Lean Out s politics by The Huffington Post In it she discussed the book s response to Lean In Women Work and the Will to Lead a 2013 book co written by Sheryl Sandberg the chief operating officer of Facebook and Nell Scovell a TV and magazine writer In the interview Foster said the only reason that Sandberg s life is at all possible is because she employs low paid women to clean her house do the grocery shopping look after her children run her finances and her advice wouldn t help those women at all 51 Foster further discussed her criticism of Lean In and liberal feminism with The Huffington Post The book assumes that women always work in the interests of women but people aren t male and female and that s it If Theresa May is a white woman who is very well educated and very wealthy she s more likely to act in the interests of say a very wealthy white man than she is a working class poor black or immigrant woman 51 In March 2016 Foster discussed the book with openDemocracy in a recorded interview titled Is capitalism destroying feminism 52 53 Further promotion of Lean Out included a discussion with Zoe Williams at the London Review Bookshop in February 2016 54 Foster also discussed the book on Novara Media 55 On 21 September 2018 Foster took part in a three person panel discussion of Sandberg s book 56 Reception edit Social geographer Danny Dorling wrote Rarely does essential reading really mean that you urgently need to read a book But Lean Out is different The Independent on Sunday called Lean Out A very important much needed and well researched book that isn t afraid to ask the right questions and demand answers It is a straight talking timely call to arms In Times Higher Education writer and academic Shahidha Bari wrote that the book was Vigorous trenchant a robust critique its conclusion is both inevitable and startling The Huffington Post wrote that it was Fascinating thought provoking and at times outrage inducing 57 58 In 2017 Lean Out was shortlisted for the Bread and Roses book award 59 Incomplete works edit According to Foster s obituary in The Guardian she had been working on a second book Where Will We Live about the history of and solutions to the housing crisis she had one chapter left to write before being sidelined by illness 2 According to her biography in the London Review of Books she was working on another book a cultural history of the dole 60 Personal life editAs a child Foster practised Taekwondo 61 At the end of her life Foster was based in South West London She was a Roman Catholic 62 In 2019 Foster wrote in The Guardian about rediscovering her faith after speaking to survivors of the Grenfell Tower fire 63 Foster s volunteer work included the Christmases she spent volunteering for homeless charities with ties to her church 12 Foster had epilepsy and schwannomatosis and wrote about her experience of disabilities and disability rights 64 65 Death editFoster s friends and colleagues announced her death on 15 July 2021 at the age of 34 Foster had been discharged from hospital on 9 July and was found in her home having died suddenly of complications related to her long term health problems 66 Tributes were paid by fellow political commentators and journalists on social media as well as a number of politicians including Jeremy Corbyn Mary Lou McDonald Angela Rayner and John McDonnell 67 Legacy editIn July 2021 South Wales Argus reported on a fundraiser for a memorial bench for Foster in Newport 68 Housmans bookshop edit nbsp Some of Dawn Foster s books at the Housman s memorial sale In October 2021 the radical London based bookshop Housmans announced that Foster s private library had been donated to the bookshop by Foster s next of kin Each book was stamped with the imprint DAWN FOSTER FOREVER From the library of Dawn Foster 1986 2021 69 70 Dawn Foster Memorial Essay Prize edit In November 2021 the Dawn Foster Memorial Essay Prize was launched in her memory by HCI Skills Gateway in partnership with Red Pepper magazine 71 72 73 In 2022 this prize was awarded to Jessica Field s essay on SaveOurHomesLS26 a resident action group in Leeds campaigning to save their prefabricated tenanted homes 74 The winning essay and the shortlisted entries were published by Red Pepper magazine 75 Bibliography editLean Out Repeater Books 2016 ISBN 9781910924020 76 Awards and influence editThe International Building Press Prize for Young Journalist of the Year 2014 20 Non traditional journalist of the year Words by Women awards 2016 77 Shortlisted for Scoop of the Year The International Building Press Prize 2016 78 Longlisted for the Orwell Prize for Exposing Britain s Social Evils 2017 79 Shortlisted for the Bread and Roses Award 2017 80 Number 82 in The 100 Most Influential People on the Left by political commentator Iain Dale 2017 81 One of the most respected journalists by journalists in the Journalists at Work survey by the National Council for the Training of Journalists 2018 82 References edit The Poisonous Euros Atmosphere Fan DawnHFoster 23 May 2014 chrisbrooke sianberry Hayley And she won her election Tweet Archived from the original on 15 July 2021 Retrieved 19 July 2021 via Twitter a b c d e McCabe Jess 5 August 2021 Dawn Foster obituary The Guardian Retrieved 5 August 2021 Dawn Foster Jacobin magazine Retrieved 27 March 2019 Foster Dawn Articles by Dawn Foster The Independent London Retrieved 5 January 2017 dead link a b Foster Dawn 20 June 2017 Would a White British Community Have Burned in Grenfell Tower The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 29 November 2021 Dawn Foster Tribune Retrieved 20 January 2019 Dawn Foster Dissent Magazine Retrieved 3 December 2021 Tributes paid to writer Dawn Foster who has died aged 34 The Guardian 15 July 2021 Retrieved 3 December 2021 a b c Hanley Lynsey 19 July 2021 We Will Never Forget Dawn Foster Jacobin Warwick hosts journo conference The Boar theboar org Retrieved 5 January 2017 a b democraciaAbierta openDemocracy in Portuguese 13 December 2013 Retrieved 3 December 2021 a b c d e f Dawn Foster obituary The Guardian 5 August 2021 Retrieved 29 November 2021 Foster on Friday Housing Network The Guardian Retrieved 29 November 2021 Ramsay Adam 19 July 2021 Dawn Foster A brilliant working class trailblazer who inspired a generation openDemocracy Retrieved 6 February 2022 Inside hoarding Inside Housing Retrieved 29 November 2021 Danny Dorling champion of the poor Inside Housing Retrieved 29 November 2021 Battle of the champion Inside Housing Retrieved 29 November 2021 The Homeless Period Inside Housing Retrieved 29 November 2021 The irreplaceable Dawn Foster Inside Housing Retrieved 29 November 2021 a b Inside Housing scoops four journalism awards Inside Housing Retrieved 29 November 2021 Foster Dawn 6 May 2015 Free Schools London Review of Books Vol 37 no 9 ISSN 0260 9592 Retrieved 6 December 2021 Dawn Foster demolishing the arguments for free schools in the London Review of Books Repeater Books 12 June 2015 Retrieved 6 December 2021 A Very Political Tragedy Jacobin Retrieved 29 November 2021 Jacques Juliet 23 July 2021 DAWN FOSTER 1986 2021 artsoftheworkingclass org Retrieved 3 March 2022 Grenfell One Year On Novara Media Retrieved 29 November 2021 The Tory Crisis That Dare Not Speak Its Name jacobinmag com Retrieved 6 December 2021 What is cultural Marxism The alt right meme in Suella Braverman s speech in Westminster New Statesman 7 June 2021 Retrieved 6 December 2021 Chaplain Chloe 26 March 2019 Tory MP Suella Braverman repeats anti Semitic conspiracy theory inews co uk Retrieved 6 December 2021 The bigoted British media actively endangers trans people Huck Magazine 11 November 2017 Retrieved 3 December 2021 Trans women are women Labour is on the right side of history Huck Magazine 23 May 2018 Retrieved 24 March 2022 Hundreds of feminists write to The Guardian rejecting argument that trans rights threaten women PinkNews 5 March 2020 Retrieved 3 December 2021 NSPCC employee who hired Munroe Bergdorf gets homophobic abuse PinkNews 12 June 2019 Retrieved 6 December 2021 Journalist Dawn Foster threatened with rape simply for being a trans ally showing how vile transphobes truly are PinkNews 4 March 2020 Retrieved 3 December 2021 Journalist Dawn Foster threatened with rape simply for being a trans ally showing how vile transphobes truly are PinkNews 4 March 2020 Retrieved 3 December 2021 Foster Dawn 5 December 2017 Ireland s Brexit borders Is this game over for the British government Huck Retrieved 6 February 2022 Dwyer Joe 16 July 2021 Dawn Foster A tribute An Phoblacht Retrieved 6 February 2022 Daily Mail train ban debate Mail vs the Guardian columnists retrieved 29 November 2021 Should the Diana tapes be made public BBC Newsnight retrieved 29 November 2021 Dawn Foster BBC News 11 10 2019 retrieved 29 November 2021 Austerity Frontline Interview with Dawn Foster retrieved 29 November 2021 NovaraFM 2018 Review of the Year retrieved 29 November 2021 NovaraFM Sovereignty Austerity Nationalism Britain and Europe retrieved 29 November 2021 NovaraFM Housing Crisis and Inequality retrieved 29 November 2021 Dan Wootton Twitter is a cesspit where freedom of speech and debate comes to die retrieved 29 November 2021 Lynsey Hanley and Dawn Foster Estates 21 December 2020 retrieved 29 November 2021 Respectable Lynsey Hanley and Dawn Foster 5 May 2016 retrieved 29 November 2021 Priestdaddy Patricia Lockwood and Dawn Foster 23 May 2017 retrieved 29 November 2021 a b Building a Radical Media The World Transformed w Glen Greenwald Paul Mason Dawn Foster retrieved 29 November 2021 Tribune The Relaunch at TWT2018 retrieved 29 November 2021 Generation F The Feminist Fight from First to Fourth Wave YouTube Archived from the original on 11 December 2021 a b Dawn Foster Interview Equality Misogyny and Leaning Out HuffPost UK 20 January 2016 Retrieved 6 December 2021 Is capitalism destroying feminism An interview with Dawn Foster openDemocracy Retrieved 6 December 2021 Is capitalism destroying feminism An interview with Dawn Foster retrieved 6 December 2021 Dawn Foster and Zoe Williams on Lean Out retrieved 29 November 2021 Lean Out In Conversation with Dawn Foster retrieved 29 November 2021 Lean In 3 Perspectives Eat Sleep Work Repeat 21 September 2018 Retrieved 6 December 2021 Dawn Foster Interview Equality Misogyny and Leaning Out HuffPost UK 20 January 2016 Retrieved 6 December 2021 Lean Out by Dawn Foster 9781910924020 PenguinRandomhouse com Retrieved 6 December 2021 Younge and Foster on Bread amp Roses shortlist The Bookseller www thebookseller com Retrieved 29 November 2021 Dawn Foster LRB www lrb co uk Retrieved 5 January 2017 Did you go to the same Gwent school as one of these celebrities South Wales Argus 29 January 2021 Retrieved 29 November 2021 Foster Dawn 5 February 2018 Secret Freemasons should have no place in public life The Guardian London How rediscovering my faith is helping me cope with a chaotic world The Guardian 5 May 2019 Retrieved 3 December 2021 Hospitalglam shows body positive campaigns work for chronic sickness too The Guardian London 19 January 2015 Retrieved 9 January 2017 Those living with disabilities face discrimination every day we must be more vigilant Huck Magazine 5 August 2019 Retrieved 29 November 2021 Smoke Ben 23 July 2021 Dawn Foster Forever Huck Magazine Retrieved 29 November 2021 Moody Tom 15 July 2021 Tributes paid to Newport author and journalist Dawn Foster South Wales Argus Retrieved 15 July 2021 Fundraiser for Dawn Foster memorial bench in Newport smashes target South Wales Argus 20 July 2021 Retrieved 29 November 2021 Dawn Foster Memorial Library Sale from 11am Sat 16th October Housmans Bookshop 6 October 2021 Retrieved 29 November 2021 Bookshop s mark of respect for sale of journalist Dawn Foster s library South Wales Argus 11 October 2021 Retrieved 29 November 2021 Reactions to racism reports housing at COP26 and more in this month s Twitter round up Inside Housing Retrieved 6 December 2021 Dawn Foster Memorial Essay Prize HCI Skills Gateway Retrieved 29 November 2021 Dawn Foster Memorial Essay Prize HCI Skills Gateway Retrieved 6 December 2021 Fighting for Cardboard City Retrieved 11 July 2022 Dawn Foster memorial essay prize Retrieved 11 July 2022 Foster Dawn 2016 Lean Out Repeater Books ISBN 9781910924020 Retrieved 22 July 2021 Words By Women awards make their mark with celebration of solidarity the Guardian 22 March 2016 Retrieved 29 November 2021 Waite Richard 19 October 2016 AJ shortlisted for six construction media awards The Architects Journal Retrieved 29 November 2021 The Orwell Prize Longlist The Orwell Foundation 15 March 2017 Retrieved 30 June 2017 Onwuemezi Natasha 8 May 2017 Younge and Foster on Bread amp Roses shortlist The Bookseller London Retrieved 30 June 2017 Dale Iain 25 September 2017 The 100 Most Influential People On The Left Iain Dale s 2017 List LBC Retrieved 31 October 2017 NCTJ publishes list of most respected journalists www nctj com Retrieved 3 December 2021 External links editDawn Foster at The Guardian Dawn Foster at The Independent Dawn Foster at openDemocracy Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Dawn Foster amp oldid 1178060548, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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