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Wikipedia

Junot Díaz

Junot Díaz (/ˈn/; born December 31, 1968) is a Dominican-American[1] writer, creative writing professor at Massachusetts Institute of Technology, and a former fiction editor at Boston Review. He also serves on the board of advisers for Freedom University, a volunteer organization in Georgia that provides post-secondary instruction to undocumented immigrants.[2] Central to Díaz's work is the immigrant experience, particularly the Latino immigrant experience.[3]

Junot Díaz
Díaz in 2012
Born (1968-12-31) December 31, 1968 (age 55)[citation needed]
Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic
Occupation
  • Novelist
  • professor
  • writer
NationalityAmerican
Education
Period1995–present
Notable awardsGuggenheim Fellowship (1999)
National Book Critics Circle Award (2007)
Pulitzer Prize (2008)
MacArthur Fellowship (2012) Inducted into American Academy of Arts and Letters (2017)
Pulitzer Prize Chair
In office
April 2018 – May 10, 2018
Preceded byEugene Robinson
Succeeded byEugene Robinson (interim)
Website
junotdiaz.com

Born in Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic, Díaz migrated with his family to New Jersey when he was six years old. He earned a Bachelor of Arts degree from Rutgers University, and shortly after graduating created the character "Yunior", who served as narrator of several of his later books. After obtaining his MFA from Cornell University, Díaz published his first book, the 1995 short story collection Drown.

Diaz received the 2008 Pulitzer Prize for Fiction for his novel The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao, and received a MacArthur Fellowship "Genius Grant" in 2012.[4]

Early life edit

Díaz was born in Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic.[5] He was the third child among seven siblings. Throughout most of his early childhood, he lived with his mother and grandparents while his father worked in the United States. In December 1974 he migrated to Parlin, New Jersey, where he was re-united with his father. There he lived less than a mile from what he has described as "one of the largest landfills in New Jersey".[6]

Díaz attended Madison Park Elementary[7] and was a voracious reader, often walking four miles in order to borrow books from his public library. At this time Díaz became fascinated with apocalyptic films and books, especially the work of John Christopher, the original Planet of the Apes films, and the BBC mini-series Edge of Darkness. Growing up Diaz struggled greatly with learning the English language. He comments that it "was a miserable experience" for him, especially since it seemed that all of his other siblings "acquired the language in a matter of months; in some ways it felt overnight". As his school took notice Diaz's family was contacted and he soon was placed in special education to provide him with more resources and opportunities to learn the language.[8]

Díaz graduated from Cedar Ridge High School in 1987 (now called Old Bridge High School) in Old Bridge Township, New Jersey,[9] though he would not begin to write formally until years later.[10]

Career edit

Díaz attended Kean College in Union, New Jersey, for one year before transferring and ultimately completing his BA at Rutgers University-New Brunswick in 1992, majoring in English; there he was involved in Demarest Hall, a creative-writing, living-learning, residence hall, and in various student organizations. He was exposed to the authors who would motivate him to become a writer: Toni Morrison and Sandra Cisneros. He worked his way through college by delivering pool tables, washing dishes, pumping gas, and working at Raritan River Steel. During an interview conducted in 2010, Díaz reflected on his experience growing up in America and working his way through college:

I can safely say I've seen the US from the bottom up ... I may be a success story as an individual. But if you adjust the knob and just take it back one setting to the family unit, I would say my family tells a much more complicated story. It tells the story of two kids in prison. It tells the story of enormous poverty, of tremendous difficulty.[citation needed]

A pervasive theme in his short story collection Drown (1996) is the absence of a father, which reflects Diaz's strained relationship with his own father, with whom he no longer keeps in contact. When Diaz once published an article in a Dominican newspaper condemning the country's treatment of Haitians, his father wrote a letter to the editor saying that the writer of the article should "go back home to Haiti".[11]

After graduating from Rutgers, Díaz worked at Rutgers University Press as an editorial assistant. At this time he also first created the quasi-autobiographical character of Yunior in a story Díaz used as part of his application for his MFA program in the early 1990s. The character would become important to much of his later work including Drown and This Is How You Lose Her (2012).[12] Yunior would become central to much of Diaz's work, Diaz later explaining how "My idea, ever since Drown, was to write six or seven books about him that would form one big novel".[12] Díaz earned his MFA from Cornell University in 1995, where he wrote most of his first collection of short stories.

Díaz teaches creative writing at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology as the Rudge and Nancy Allen Professor of Writing[13] and was the fiction editor for Boston Review.[14] He is active in the Dominican American community and is a founding member of the Voices of Our Nation Arts Foundation, which focuses on writers of color. He was a Millet Writing Fellow at Wesleyan University, in 2009, and participated in Wesleyan's Distinguished Writers Series.[15]

Personal life edit

Díaz lives in a domestic partnership with paranormal romance writer Marjorie Liu.[16]

Work edit

1994–2004: Early work and Drown edit

Díaz's short fiction has appeared in The New Yorker magazine, which listed him as one of the 20 top writers for the 21st century.[17] He has been published in Story, The Paris Review, Enkare Review and in the anthologies The Best American Short Stories five times (1996, 1997, 1999, 2000, 2013), The PEN/O. Henry Prize Stories (2009), and African Voices. He is best known for his two major works: the short story collection Drown (1996) and the novel The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao (2007). Both were published to critical acclaim and he won the 2008 Pulitzer Prize for Fiction for the latter. Diaz himself has described his writing style as "a disobedient child of New Jersey and the Dominican Republic if that can be possibly imagined with way too much education".[18]

Díaz has received a [Eugene McDermott] Award, a fellowship from the John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation, a Lila Wallace Reader's Digest Writers Award, the 2002 PEN/Malamud Award, the 2003 US-Japan Creative Artist Fellowship from the National Endowment for the Arts, a fellowship at the Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study at Harvard University and the Rome Prize from the American Academy of Arts and Letters. He was selected as one of the 39 most important Latin American writers under the age of 39 by the Bogotá World Book Capital and the Hay Festival.[19]

The stories in Drown focus on the teenage narrator's impoverished, fatherless youth in the Dominican Republic and his struggle adapting to his new life in New Jersey. Reviews were generally strong but not without complaints.[20] Díaz read twice for PRI's This American Life: "Edison, New Jersey"[21] in 1997 and "How to Date a Brown Girl (Black Girl, White Girl, or Halfie)"[22] in 1998. Díaz also published a Spanish translation of' Drown, entitled Negocios. The arrival of his novel (The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao) in 2007 prompted a noticeable re-appraisal of Díaz's earlier work. Drown became widely recognized as an important landmark in contemporary literature—ten years after its initial publication—even by critics who had either entirely ignored the book[23] or had given it poor reviews.[24]

2005–11: The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao edit

The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao was published in September 2007. New York Times critic Michiko Kakutani characterized Díaz's writing in the novel as "a sort of streetwise brand of Spanglish that even the most monolingual reader can easily inhale: lots of flash words and razzle-dazzle talk, lots of body language on the sentences, lots of David Foster Wallace-esque footnotes and asides. And he conjures with seemingly effortless aplomb the two worlds his characters inhabit: the Dominican Republic, the ghost-haunted motherland that shapes their nightmares and their dreams; and America (a.k.a. New Jersey), the land of freedom and hope and not-so-shiny possibilities that they've fled to as part of the great Dominican diaspora.[23] Díaz said about the protagonist of the novel, "Oscar was a composite of all the nerds that I grew up with who didn't have that special reservoir of masculine privilege. Oscar was who I would have been if it had not been for my father or my brother or my own willingness to fight or my own inability to fit into any category easily." He has said that he sees a meaningful and fitting connection between the science fiction and/or epic literary genres and the multi-faceted immigrant experience.[25]

Writing for Time, critic Lev Grossman said that Díaz's novel was "so astoundingly great that in a fall crowded with heavyweights—Richard Russo, Philip Roth—Díaz is a good bet to run away with the field. You could call The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao ... the saga of an immigrant family, but that wouldn't really be fair. It's an immigrant-family saga for people who don't read immigrant-family sagas."[26] In September 2007, Miramax acquired the rights for a film adaptation of The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao.[27]

In addition to the Pulitzer, The Brief Wondrous life of Oscar Wao was awarded the John Sargent Sr. First Novel Prize,[28] the National Book Critics Circle Award for Best Novel of 2007 [29] the Anisfield-Wolf Book Awards, the 2008 Dayton Literary Peace Prize for Fiction,[30] the 2008 Hurston-Wright Legacy Award, and the Massachusetts Book Awards Fiction Award in 2007.[31] Díaz also won the James Beard Foundation's MFK Fisher Distinguished Writing Award for his article "He'll Take El Alto", which appeared in Gourmet, September 2007.[32] The novel was also selected by Time[33] and New York Magazine[34] as the best novel of 2007. The St. Louis Post-Dispatch, Los Angeles Times, Village Voice, Christian Science Monitor, New Statesman, Washington Post, and Publishers Weekly were among the 35 publications that placed the novel on their 'Best of 2007' lists. The novel was the subject of a panel at the 2008 Modern Language Association conference in San Francisco.[35] Stanford University dedicated a symposium to Junot Díaz in 2012, with roundtables of leading US Latino/a Studies scholars commenting on his creative writing and activism.[36]

In February 2010, Díaz's contributions toward encouraging fellow writers were recognized when he was awarded the Barnes & Noble Writers for Writers Award, alongside Maxine Hong Kingston and poet M.L. Liebler.[37]

2012–present: This Is How You Lose Her and other works edit

In September 2012, he released a collection of short stories entitled This Is How You Lose Her.[38][39][40] The collection was named a finalist for the 2012 National Book Award on October 10, 2012.[41] In his review of the book on online arts and culture journal Frontier Psychiatrist, Editor-In-Chief Keith Meatto wrote, "While This is How You Lose Her will surely advance Diaz's literary career, it may complicate his love life. For the reader, the collection raises the obvious question of what you would do if your lover cheated on you, and implies two no less challenging questions: How do you find love and how do you make it last?"[42]

One reviewer wrote, "The stories in This Is How You Lose Her, by turns hilarious and devastating, raucous and tender, lay bare the infinite longing and inevitable weaknesses of our all-too-human hearts. They capture the heat of new passion, the recklessness with which we betray what we most treasure, and the torture we go through – "the begging, the crawling over glass, the crying" – to try to mend what we've broken beyond repair. They recall the echoes that intimacy leaves behind, even where we thought we did not care ... Most of all, these stories remind us that the habit of passion always triumphs over experience, and that "love, when it hits us for real, has a half-life of forever".[40]

In 2012, Diaz received a $500,000 MacArthur "Genius grant" award.[43][44][45][46] He said "I think I was speechless for two days" and called it "stupendous" and a "mind-blowing honor".[45]

After Oscar Wao, Diaz began work on a second novel, a science-fiction epic with the working title Monstro.[47] Diaz had previously attempted to write a science fiction novel twice prior to Oscar Wao, with earlier efforts in the genre "Shadow of the Adept, a far-future novel in the vein of Gene Wolfe's The Shadow of the Torturer, and Dark America, an Akira-inspired post-apocalyptic nightmare" remaining incomplete and unpublished.[48] Part of the appeal of science fiction to Diaz, he explained in an interview with Wired, is that science fiction grapples with the idea of power in a manner other genres do not: "I didn't see mainstream, literary, realistic fiction talking about power, talking about dictatorship, talking about the consequences of breeding people, which of course is something that in the Caribbean is never far away."[49] In an interview with New York Magazine prior to the release of This Is How You Lose Her, Diaz revealed that the work-in-progress novel concerns "a 14-year-old 'Dominican York' girl who saves the planet from a full-blown apocalypse".[50] but he also warned that the novel may never be completed: "I'm only at the first part of the novel, so I haven't really gotten down to the eating," he says, "and I've got to eat a couple cities before I think the thing will really get going."[48] As of June 2015, the novel-in-progress appears to be abandoned – in a June 2015 interview for Words on a Wire, when asked about his progress on Monstro, Diaz said "Yeah, I'm not writing that book anymore ..."[51]

Diaz's first children's book, Islandborn, was published March 13, 2018. The story follows an Afro-Latina girl named Lola whose journey takes her back to collect memories of her country of origin, Dominican Republic.[52][53]

With regard to his own writing, Diaz has said: "There are two types of writers: those who write for other writers, and those who write for readers,"[54] and that he prefers to keep his readers in mind when writing, as they'll be more likely to gloss over his mistakes and act as willing participants in a story, rather than actively looking to criticize his writing.[54]

A poll of US critics in January 2015 named Díaz's The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao as "the best novel of the 21st century to date".[55] In February 2017, Diaz was formally inducted into the American Academy of Arts and Letters.[56]

Activism and advocacy edit

Díaz has been active in a number of community organizations in New York City, from Pro-Libertad, to the Communist Dominican Workers' Party (Partido de los Trabajadores Dominicanos), and the Unión de Jóvenes Dominicanos ("Dominican Youth Union"). He has been critical of immigration policy in the United States.[57] With fellow author Edwidge Danticat, Díaz published an op-ed piece in The New York Times condemning the Dominican government's deportation of Haitians and Haitian Dominicans.[58]

In response to Díaz's criticism, the Consul General of the Dominican Republic in New York called Díaz an "anti-Dominican" and revoked the Order of Merit he had been awarded by the Dominican Republic in 2009.[59][60]

On May 22, 2010, it was announced that Díaz had been selected to sit on the 20-member Pulitzer Prize board of jurors.[61] Díaz described his appointment, and the fact that he is the first of Latin background to be appointed to the panel, as an "extraordinary honor".[62][63]

As of September 2014, he is the honorary chairman of the DREAM Project, a non-profit education involvement program in the Dominican Republic.[64]

Allegations of abusive behavior edit

In May 2018, the author Zinzi Clemmons publicly confronted Díaz, alleging that he had once forcibly cornered and kissed her.[65][66][67] Other women, including the writers Carmen Maria Machado and Monica Byrne, responded on Twitter with their own accounts of verbal abuse by Díaz.[68][69][70][71][72] The author Alisa Valdes wrote a blog post alleging "misogynistic abuse" on the part of Díaz some years prior;[67][73] she said that she had been rebuked for attacking a fellow Latino author when she had called attention to Díaz's behavior in the past.[68][74][75]

Literary and feminist circles were divided between supporters of Díaz and his accusers.[68][76] The issue of how sexual-harassment claims might be handled differently depending on the race or ethnicity of the accused provoked particular controversy.[68] Several weeks before Clemmons made her allegations,[77][78][79] Díaz had published an essay in The New Yorker, recounting his own experience of being raped at the age of eight, along with its effect on his later life and relationships.[80][81] He addressed the essay to a reader who had once asked him if he had been abused, writing that the childhood abuse he experienced led him to hurt others in later life.[74][82] While the essay was widely praised as honest and courageous, others accused Díaz of trying to defuse allegations about his own behavior.[76][83]

The author Rebecca Walker, along with a group of academics, including educators from Harvard and Stanford universities, protested the media response to the accusations in an open letter to The Chronicle of Higher Education, saying it amounted to "a full-blown media-harassment campaign."[84][85] While not dismissing the allegations, they cautioned against an "uncritical" and "sensationalist" handling of the issue that they said could reinforce stereotypes of Black people and Latinos as sexual predators.[84][85][86] Linda Martín Alcoff, a professor of philosophy at Hunter College, wrote an essay in The New York Times placing allegations of sexual assault such as those against Díaz within a larger political context, writing of the need "to develop critiques of the conventions of sexual behavior that produce systemic sexual abuse".[68][87]

MIT, where Díaz teaches creative writing, later announced that their investigation had not revealed any evidence of wrongdoing.[88][76][89][90] The editors of Boston Review also announced that Díaz would stay on at the magazine,[76][91] writing that the allegations lacked "the kind of severity that animated the #MeToo movement".[78][89][92] Both decisions were criticized; the magazine's poetry editors resigned in protest.[76] One of the Boston Review editors has since written in detail about their investigation into the allegations regarding Díaz and their decision to retain him as fiction editor.[93]

Following an initial statement where he wrote of taking "responsibility for my past", Díaz later denied having inappropriately kissed Clemmons; he stated that "people had already moved on to the punishment phase" and that he doubted his denial would be believed at first.[94][95][96] The Boston Globe later described the case as a "turning point" in public response to the Me Too movement, largely because Díaz faced less institutional backlash than other prominent male figures who had been accused of sexual misconduct and "the deluge of #MeToo stories his accusers predicted" did not materialize.[78] Díaz voluntarily resigned as chair of the Pulitzer Prize board soon after the allegations were made public.[97][98] After a five-month review by an independent law firm, the board announced it "did not find evidence warranting removal of Professor Diaz".[99][100]

Bibliography edit

Novels edit

  • The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao. New York: Riverhead, 2007. ISBN 978-1-59448-958-7

Short story collections edit

Children's books edit

Essays edit

  • "Homecoming, with Turtle" (The New Yorker, June 14, 2004)
  • "Summer Love, Overheated" (GQ, April 2008)
  • "One Year: Storyteller-in-Chief" (The New Yorker, January 20, 2010)
  • "Apocalypse: What Disasters Reveal" (Boston Review, May/June 2011)
  • "MFA vs. POC" (The New Yorker, April 30, 2014)
  • "The Silence: The Legacy of Childhood Trauma" (The New Yorker, April 16, 2018)

Speculative fiction edit

  • "Monstro". Latinx Rising. The Ohio State University Press. 2020.[101]

Awards and nominations edit

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Terrie M Rooney (1998). Contemporary Authors, Volume 161. Gale Research Co. p. 107. ISBN 9780787619947.
  2. ^ Jefferson, Tara (March 28, 2013). "Junot Diaz Promotes "Freedom University" On The Colbert Report". Anisfield-Wolf Community Blog. Retrieved June 18, 2013.
  3. ^ Bahr, David (December 8, 2007). "Immigrant Song". Time Out New York. Retrieved July 4, 2011.
  4. ^ . Associated Press. October 1, 2012. Archived from the original on June 30, 2015. Retrieved October 1, 2012.
  5. ^ Loss, Jacquelyn (2003). "Junot Díaz". In West-Durán, Alan (ed.). Latino and Latina Writers. New York City: Charles Scribner's Sons. pp. 803–816.
  6. ^ . Splash of Red. November 30, 2009. Archived from the original on February 22, 2014. Retrieved June 18, 2013.
  7. ^ López, Adriana V. (November 1, 2008). . Criticas Magazine. Archived from the original on March 3, 2010. Retrieved June 18, 2013.
  8. ^ Knight, Henry Ace. "An Interview with Junot Díaz". Asymptote Journal. Retrieved April 30, 2019.
  9. ^ Tejada, Miguel Cruz (August 11, 2008). . [El Nuevo Diario (in Spanish). Archived from the original on August 22, 2008. Retrieved August 25, 2008. Hizo el bachillerato en el Cedar Ridge High School de Old Bridge, Nueva Jersey, en 1987, y se licenció en inglés en la Universidad Rutgers (1992), e hizo un Master of Fine Arts en la Universidad de Cornell.
  10. ^ . Guernicamag. July 2009. Archived from the original on January 7, 2012. Retrieved June 3, 2012.
  11. ^ Jasmine Garsd (September 6, 2012). "Guest DJ: Pulitzer Prize-Winning Author Junot Diaz". NPR music Alt Latino. Retrieved September 13, 2012.
  12. ^ a b "Interview: Junot Díaz Talks Dying Art, the Line Between Fact and Fiction, and What Scares Him Most". Complex. December 17, 2012. Retrieved May 1, 2013.
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  37. ^ "Poets & Writers Announces Recipients of 2010 Writers for Writers Award and Editor's Award". Poets & Writers. January 29, 2010. Retrieved June 18, 2013.
  38. ^ Kakutani, Michiko (September 20, 2012). "Acclimating to America, and to Women". The New York Times.
  39. ^ Leah Hager Cohen (September 20, 2012). "Love Stories". The New York Times.
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  45. ^ a b "Junot Díaz wins MacArthur 'genius grant' – MIT News Office". Web.mit.edu. October 2, 2012. Retrieved October 29, 2012.
  46. ^ Burleigh, Nina (October 9, 2012). "Junot Díaz Is #WINNING: The Author Collects Awards Like His Characters Bag Women". The Observer. Retrieved October 29, 2012.
  47. ^ Aldama, Frederick Luis; Mathew David Goodwin. ""Monstro" [Latinx Rising: An Anthology of Latinx Science Fiction and Fantasy]". ohiostatepress.org. Retrieved August 18, 2020.
  48. ^ a b "Junot Díaz Aims to Fulfill His Dream of Publishing Sci-Fi Novel With Monstro". Underwire. October 3, 2012. Retrieved October 29, 2012.
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  51. ^ "WORDS ON a WIRE: Junot Díaz". El Paso, Tex.: KTEP-FM. June 7, 2015.
  52. ^ Islandborn by Junot Diaz at Penguin Random House.
  53. ^ MacPherson, Karen (March 9, 2018), "Junot Diaz says children's books lack diversity", Washington Post.
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  56. ^ a b "2017 Newly Elected Members" (Press release). New York, N.Y.: American Academy of Arts and Letters.
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  61. ^ Pulitzer.org
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  65. ^ Alter, Alexandra; Bromwich, Jonah E.; Cave, Damien (May 4, 2018). "The Writer Zinzi Clemmons Accuses Junot Díaz of Forcibly Kissing Her". The New York Times.
  66. ^ Stefansky, Emma (May 5, 2018). "Junot Diaz Withdraws from Writers' Festival After Claims of Sexual Harassment". Vanity Fair.
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  68. ^ a b c d e Flaherty, Colleen (May 29, 2018). "Junot Díaz, Feminism and Ethnicity". Inside Higher Ed.
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  70. ^ Silman, Anna (May 4, 2018). "Junot Díaz Responds to Allegations of Sexual Misconduct and Verbal Abuse". The Cut.
  71. ^ Maher, John (May 4, 2018). "Díaz Accused of Harassment, 'Bullying'". Publishers Weekly.
  72. ^ McClurg, Jocelyn (May 4, 2018). "Junot Díaz, Pulitzer Prize-winning author of 'Oscar Wao,' accused of sexual misconduct". USA Today.
  73. ^ Arnold, Amanda (May 6, 2018). "Author Alisa Valdes on Junot Díaz: 'He Mistreated Me, and I Was Severely Punished for It'". The Cut.
  74. ^ a b Phillips, Kristine (May 6, 2018). "Pulitzer Prize-winning author Junot Diaz accused of sexual misconduct, misogynistic behavior". The Washington Post.
  75. ^ Tempera, Jacqueline (May 8, 2018). "MIT looking into accusations of bullying, unwanted sexual contact against Junot Diaz". masslive.com.
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  77. ^ Grady, Constance (May 7, 2018). "Pulitzer winner Junot Díaz has been accused of forcibly kissing a woman and berating 2 others". Vox.
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  81. ^ Díaz, Junot (April 16, 2018). "The Silence: The Legacy of Childhood Trauma". The New Yorker.
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Further reading edit

  • "The Ethos of Writing: Alexander Parsons Talks to Junot Díaz". Literal Magazine. January 14, 2013.
  • Planas, Roque (December 4, 2013). "Junot Diaz Speaks Out After Insults to His Dominican-ness". The Huffington Post.
  • González, Christopher (2017). Permissible narratives: the promise of Latino/a literature. Columbus, Ohio: The Ohio State University Press. ISBN 978-0-8142-1350-6. OCLC 975447664. On The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: postscript (link)

External links edit

  • "Retro Report: Junot Díaz and the D&D Revolution"—Junot Díaz on playing Dungeons & Dragons (video)
  • Junot Díaz on the Muck Rack journalist listing site  

junot, díaz, born, december, 1968, dominican, american, writer, creative, writing, professor, massachusetts, institute, technology, former, fiction, editor, boston, review, also, serves, board, advisers, freedom, university, volunteer, organization, georgia, t. Junot Diaz ˈ dʒ uː n oʊ born December 31 1968 is a Dominican American 1 writer creative writing professor at Massachusetts Institute of Technology and a former fiction editor at Boston Review He also serves on the board of advisers for Freedom University a volunteer organization in Georgia that provides post secondary instruction to undocumented immigrants 2 Central to Diaz s work is the immigrant experience particularly the Latino immigrant experience 3 Junot DiazDiaz in 2012Born 1968 12 31 December 31 1968 age 55 citation needed Santo Domingo Dominican RepublicOccupationNovelist professor writerNationalityAmericanEducationRutgers University BA Cornell University MFA Period1995 presentNotable awardsGuggenheim Fellowship 1999 National Book Critics Circle Award 2007 Pulitzer Prize 2008 MacArthur Fellowship 2012 Inducted into American Academy of Arts and Letters 2017 Pulitzer Prize ChairIn office April 2018 May 10 2018Preceded byEugene RobinsonSucceeded byEugene Robinson interim Websitejunotdiaz wbr comBorn in Santo Domingo Dominican Republic Diaz migrated with his family to New Jersey when he was six years old He earned a Bachelor of Arts degree from Rutgers University and shortly after graduating created the character Yunior who served as narrator of several of his later books After obtaining his MFA from Cornell University Diaz published his first book the 1995 short story collection Drown Diaz received the 2008 Pulitzer Prize for Fiction for his novel The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao and received a MacArthur Fellowship Genius Grant in 2012 4 Contents 1 Early life 2 Career 3 Personal life 4 Work 4 1 1994 2004 Early work and Drown 4 2 2005 11 The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao 4 3 2012 present This Is How You Lose Her and other works 5 Activism and advocacy 6 Allegations of abusive behavior 7 Bibliography 7 1 Novels 7 2 Short story collections 7 3 Children s books 7 4 Essays 7 5 Speculative fiction 8 Awards and nominations 9 See also 10 References 11 Further reading 12 External linksEarly life editDiaz was born in Santo Domingo Dominican Republic 5 He was the third child among seven siblings Throughout most of his early childhood he lived with his mother and grandparents while his father worked in the United States In December 1974 he migrated to Parlin New Jersey where he was re united with his father There he lived less than a mile from what he has described as one of the largest landfills in New Jersey 6 Diaz attended Madison Park Elementary 7 and was a voracious reader often walking four miles in order to borrow books from his public library At this time Diaz became fascinated with apocalyptic films and books especially the work of John Christopher the original Planet of the Apes films and the BBC mini series Edge of Darkness Growing up Diaz struggled greatly with learning the English language He comments that it was a miserable experience for him especially since it seemed that all of his other siblings acquired the language in a matter of months in some ways it felt overnight As his school took notice Diaz s family was contacted and he soon was placed in special education to provide him with more resources and opportunities to learn the language 8 Diaz graduated from Cedar Ridge High School in 1987 now called Old Bridge High School in Old Bridge Township New Jersey 9 though he would not begin to write formally until years later 10 Career editDiaz attended Kean College in Union New Jersey for one year before transferring and ultimately completing his BA at Rutgers University New Brunswick in 1992 majoring in English there he was involved in Demarest Hall a creative writing living learning residence hall and in various student organizations He was exposed to the authors who would motivate him to become a writer Toni Morrison and Sandra Cisneros He worked his way through college by delivering pool tables washing dishes pumping gas and working at Raritan River Steel During an interview conducted in 2010 Diaz reflected on his experience growing up in America and working his way through college I can safely say I ve seen the US from the bottom up I may be a success story as an individual But if you adjust the knob and just take it back one setting to the family unit I would say my family tells a much more complicated story It tells the story of two kids in prison It tells the story of enormous poverty of tremendous difficulty citation needed A pervasive theme in his short story collection Drown 1996 is the absence of a father which reflects Diaz s strained relationship with his own father with whom he no longer keeps in contact When Diaz once published an article in a Dominican newspaper condemning the country s treatment of Haitians his father wrote a letter to the editor saying that the writer of the article should go back home to Haiti 11 After graduating from Rutgers Diaz worked at Rutgers University Press as an editorial assistant At this time he also first created the quasi autobiographical character of Yunior in a story Diaz used as part of his application for his MFA program in the early 1990s The character would become important to much of his later work including Drown and This Is How You Lose Her 2012 12 Yunior would become central to much of Diaz s work Diaz later explaining how My idea ever since Drown was to write six or seven books about him that would form one big novel 12 Diaz earned his MFA from Cornell University in 1995 where he wrote most of his first collection of short stories Diaz teaches creative writing at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology as the Rudge and Nancy Allen Professor of Writing 13 and was the fiction editor for Boston Review 14 He is active in the Dominican American community and is a founding member of the Voices of Our Nation Arts Foundation which focuses on writers of color He was a Millet Writing Fellow at Wesleyan University in 2009 and participated in Wesleyan s Distinguished Writers Series 15 Personal life editDiaz lives in a domestic partnership with paranormal romance writer Marjorie Liu 16 Work edit1994 2004 Early work and Drown edit Diaz s short fiction has appeared in The New Yorker magazine which listed him as one of the 20 top writers for the 21st century 17 He has been published in Story The Paris Review Enkare Review and in the anthologies The Best American Short Stories five times 1996 1997 1999 2000 2013 The PEN O Henry Prize Stories 2009 and African Voices He is best known for his two major works the short story collection Drown 1996 and the novel The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao 2007 Both were published to critical acclaim and he won the 2008 Pulitzer Prize for Fiction for the latter Diaz himself has described his writing style as a disobedient child of New Jersey and the Dominican Republic if that can be possibly imagined with way too much education 18 Diaz has received a Eugene McDermott Award a fellowship from the John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation a Lila Wallace Reader s Digest Writers Award the 2002 PEN Malamud Award the 2003 US Japan Creative Artist Fellowship from the National Endowment for the Arts a fellowship at the Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study at Harvard University and the Rome Prize from the American Academy of Arts and Letters He was selected as one of the 39 most important Latin American writers under the age of 39 by the Bogota World Book Capital and the Hay Festival 19 The stories in Drown focus on the teenage narrator s impoverished fatherless youth in the Dominican Republic and his struggle adapting to his new life in New Jersey Reviews were generally strong but not without complaints 20 Diaz read twice for PRI s This American Life Edison New Jersey 21 in 1997 and How to Date a Brown Girl Black Girl White Girl or Halfie 22 in 1998 Diaz also published a Spanish translation of Drown entitled Negocios The arrival of his novel The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao in 2007 prompted a noticeable re appraisal of Diaz s earlier work Drown became widely recognized as an important landmark in contemporary literature ten years after its initial publication even by critics who had either entirely ignored the book 23 or had given it poor reviews 24 2005 11 The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao edit The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao was published in September 2007 New York Times critic Michiko Kakutani characterized Diaz s writing in the novel as a sort of streetwise brand of Spanglish that even the most monolingual reader can easily inhale lots of flash words and razzle dazzle talk lots of body language on the sentences lots of David Foster Wallace esque footnotes and asides And he conjures with seemingly effortless aplomb the two worlds his characters inhabit the Dominican Republic the ghost haunted motherland that shapes their nightmares and their dreams and America a k a New Jersey the land of freedom and hope and not so shiny possibilities that they ve fled to as part of the great Dominican diaspora 23 Diaz said about the protagonist of the novel Oscar was a composite of all the nerds that I grew up with who didn t have that special reservoir of masculine privilege Oscar was who I would have been if it had not been for my father or my brother or my own willingness to fight or my own inability to fit into any category easily He has said that he sees a meaningful and fitting connection between the science fiction and or epic literary genres and the multi faceted immigrant experience 25 Writing for Time critic Lev Grossman said that Diaz s novel was so astoundingly great that in a fall crowded with heavyweights Richard Russo Philip Roth Diaz is a good bet to run away with the field You could call The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao the saga of an immigrant family but that wouldn t really be fair It s an immigrant family saga for people who don t read immigrant family sagas 26 In September 2007 Miramax acquired the rights for a film adaptation of The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao 27 In addition to the Pulitzer The Brief Wondrous life of Oscar Wao was awarded the John Sargent Sr First Novel Prize 28 the National Book Critics Circle Award for Best Novel of 2007 29 the Anisfield Wolf Book Awards the 2008 Dayton Literary Peace Prize for Fiction 30 the 2008 Hurston Wright Legacy Award and the Massachusetts Book Awards Fiction Award in 2007 31 Diaz also won the James Beard Foundation s MFK Fisher Distinguished Writing Award for his article He ll Take El Alto which appeared in Gourmet September 2007 32 The novel was also selected by Time 33 and New York Magazine 34 as the best novel of 2007 The St Louis Post Dispatch Los Angeles Times Village Voice Christian Science Monitor New Statesman Washington Post and Publishers Weekly were among the 35 publications that placed the novel on their Best of 2007 lists The novel was the subject of a panel at the 2008 Modern Language Association conference in San Francisco 35 Stanford University dedicated a symposium to Junot Diaz in 2012 with roundtables of leading US Latino a Studies scholars commenting on his creative writing and activism 36 In February 2010 Diaz s contributions toward encouraging fellow writers were recognized when he was awarded the Barnes amp Noble Writers for Writers Award alongside Maxine Hong Kingston and poet M L Liebler 37 2012 present This Is How You Lose Her and other works edit In September 2012 he released a collection of short stories entitled This Is How You Lose Her 38 39 40 The collection was named a finalist for the 2012 National Book Award on October 10 2012 41 In his review of the book on online arts and culture journal Frontier Psychiatrist Editor In Chief Keith Meatto wrote While This is How You Lose Her will surely advance Diaz s literary career it may complicate his love life For the reader the collection raises the obvious question of what you would do if your lover cheated on you and implies two no less challenging questions How do you find love and how do you make it last 42 One reviewer wrote The stories in This Is How You Lose Her by turns hilarious and devastating raucous and tender lay bare the infinite longing and inevitable weaknesses of our all too human hearts They capture the heat of new passion the recklessness with which we betray what we most treasure and the torture we go through the begging the crawling over glass the crying to try to mend what we ve broken beyond repair They recall the echoes that intimacy leaves behind even where we thought we did not care Most of all these stories remind us that the habit of passion always triumphs over experience and that love when it hits us for real has a half life of forever 40 In 2012 Diaz received a 500 000 MacArthur Genius grant award 43 44 45 46 He said I think I was speechless for two days and called it stupendous and a mind blowing honor 45 After Oscar Wao Diaz began work on a second novel a science fiction epic with the working title Monstro 47 Diaz had previously attempted to write a science fiction novel twice prior to Oscar Wao with earlier efforts in the genre Shadow of the Adept a far future novel in the vein of Gene Wolfe s The Shadow of the Torturer and Dark America an Akira inspired post apocalyptic nightmare remaining incomplete and unpublished 48 Part of the appeal of science fiction to Diaz he explained in an interview with Wired is that science fiction grapples with the idea of power in a manner other genres do not I didn t see mainstream literary realistic fiction talking about power talking about dictatorship talking about the consequences of breeding people which of course is something that in the Caribbean is never far away 49 In an interview with New York Magazine prior to the release of This Is How You Lose Her Diaz revealed that the work in progress novel concerns a 14 year old Dominican York girl who saves the planet from a full blown apocalypse 50 but he also warned that the novel may never be completed I m only at the first part of the novel so I haven t really gotten down to the eating he says and I ve got to eat a couple cities before I think the thing will really get going 48 As of June 2015 the novel in progress appears to be abandoned in a June 2015 interview for Words on a Wire when asked about his progress on Monstro Diaz said Yeah I m not writing that book anymore 51 Diaz s first children s book Islandborn was published March 13 2018 The story follows an Afro Latina girl named Lola whose journey takes her back to collect memories of her country of origin Dominican Republic 52 53 With regard to his own writing Diaz has said There are two types of writers those who write for other writers and those who write for readers 54 and that he prefers to keep his readers in mind when writing as they ll be more likely to gloss over his mistakes and act as willing participants in a story rather than actively looking to criticize his writing 54 A poll of US critics in January 2015 named Diaz s The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao as the best novel of the 21st century to date 55 In February 2017 Diaz was formally inducted into the American Academy of Arts and Letters 56 Activism and advocacy editDiaz has been active in a number of community organizations in New York City from Pro Libertad to the Communist Dominican Workers Party Partido de los Trabajadores Dominicanos and the Union de Jovenes Dominicanos Dominican Youth Union He has been critical of immigration policy in the United States 57 With fellow author Edwidge Danticat Diaz published an op ed piece in The New York Times condemning the Dominican government s deportation of Haitians and Haitian Dominicans 58 In response to Diaz s criticism the Consul General of the Dominican Republic in New York called Diaz an anti Dominican and revoked the Order of Merit he had been awarded by the Dominican Republic in 2009 59 60 On May 22 2010 it was announced that Diaz had been selected to sit on the 20 member Pulitzer Prize board of jurors 61 Diaz described his appointment and the fact that he is the first of Latin background to be appointed to the panel as an extraordinary honor 62 63 As of September 2014 update he is the honorary chairman of the DREAM Project a non profit education involvement program in the Dominican Republic 64 Allegations of abusive behavior editIn May 2018 the author Zinzi Clemmons publicly confronted Diaz alleging that he had once forcibly cornered and kissed her 65 66 67 Other women including the writers Carmen Maria Machado and Monica Byrne responded on Twitter with their own accounts of verbal abuse by Diaz 68 69 70 71 72 The author Alisa Valdes wrote a blog post alleging misogynistic abuse on the part of Diaz some years prior 67 73 she said that she had been rebuked for attacking a fellow Latino author when she had called attention to Diaz s behavior in the past 68 74 75 Literary and feminist circles were divided between supporters of Diaz and his accusers 68 76 The issue of how sexual harassment claims might be handled differently depending on the race or ethnicity of the accused provoked particular controversy 68 Several weeks before Clemmons made her allegations 77 78 79 Diaz had published an essay in The New Yorker recounting his own experience of being raped at the age of eight along with its effect on his later life and relationships 80 81 He addressed the essay to a reader who had once asked him if he had been abused writing that the childhood abuse he experienced led him to hurt others in later life 74 82 While the essay was widely praised as honest and courageous others accused Diaz of trying to defuse allegations about his own behavior 76 83 The author Rebecca Walker along with a group of academics including educators from Harvard and Stanford universities protested the media response to the accusations in an open letter to The Chronicle of Higher Education saying it amounted to a full blown media harassment campaign 84 85 While not dismissing the allegations they cautioned against an uncritical and sensationalist handling of the issue that they said could reinforce stereotypes of Black people and Latinos as sexual predators 84 85 86 Linda Martin Alcoff a professor of philosophy at Hunter College wrote an essay in The New York Times placing allegations of sexual assault such as those against Diaz within a larger political context writing of the need to develop critiques of the conventions of sexual behavior that produce systemic sexual abuse 68 87 MIT where Diaz teaches creative writing later announced that their investigation had not revealed any evidence of wrongdoing 88 76 89 90 The editors of Boston Review also announced that Diaz would stay on at the magazine 76 91 writing that the allegations lacked the kind of severity that animated the MeToo movement 78 89 92 Both decisions were criticized the magazine s poetry editors resigned in protest 76 One of the Boston Review editors has since written in detail about their investigation into the allegations regarding Diaz and their decision to retain him as fiction editor 93 Following an initial statement where he wrote of taking responsibility for my past Diaz later denied having inappropriately kissed Clemmons he stated that people had already moved on to the punishment phase and that he doubted his denial would be believed at first 94 95 96 The Boston Globe later described the case as a turning point in public response to the Me Too movement largely because Diaz faced less institutional backlash than other prominent male figures who had been accused of sexual misconduct and the deluge of MeToo stories his accusers predicted did not materialize 78 Diaz voluntarily resigned as chair of the Pulitzer Prize board soon after the allegations were made public 97 98 After a five month review by an independent law firm the board announced it did not find evidence warranting removal of Professor Diaz 99 100 Bibliography editNovels edit The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao New York Riverhead 2007 ISBN 978 1 59448 958 7Short story collections edit Drown New York Riverhead 1996 ISBN 978 1 57322 041 5 This Is How You Lose Her New York Riverhead 2012 ISBN 978 1 59448 736 1Children s books edit Islandborn with illustrations by Leo Espinosa New York Dial Press 2018 ISBN 978 0735229860 Essays edit Homecoming with Turtle The New Yorker June 14 2004 Summer Love Overheated GQ April 2008 One Year Storyteller in Chief The New Yorker January 20 2010 Apocalypse What Disasters Reveal Boston Review May June 2011 MFA vs POC The New Yorker April 30 2014 The Silence The Legacy of Childhood Trauma The New Yorker April 16 2018 Speculative fiction edit Monstro Latinx Rising The Ohio State University Press 2020 101 Awards and nominations edit2002 PEN Malamud Award 102 2008 Pulitzer Prize for Fiction for The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao 103 2007 Salon Book Award for The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao 2007 National Book Critics Circle Award for The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao 104 2007 Center for Fiction First Novel Prize for The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao 105 2007 Los Angeles Times Book Prize Fiction finalist for The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao 106 2008 Fellow of the American Academy Rome Prize 2008 Dayton Literary Peace Prize Fiction for The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao 107 2008 Anisfield Wolf Book Award Fiction for The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao 108 2009 International Dublin Literary Award shortlist for The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao 2011 The Nicolas Guillen Philosophical Literature Prize Caribbean Philosophical Association 2012 MacArthur Fellowship 2012 National Book Award finalist This is How You Lose Her 109 2012 Publishers Weekly Best Books This is How You Lose Her 110 2012 Kansas City Star Top 100 Books This is How You Lose Her 2012 New York Times 100 Notable Books This Is How You Lose Her 2012 Goodreads Choice Awards Best Fiction finalist This is How You Lose Her 111 2012 Story Prize finalist 112 113 114 2013 Sunday Times EFG Private Bank Short Story Award winner Miss Lora from This is How You Lose Her 115 2013 Frank O Connor International Short Story Award longlist for This is How You Lose Her 2013 Andrew Carnegie Medal for Excellence in Fiction finalist Fiction for This is How You Lose Her 116 117 2013 Honorary Doctorate Doctor of Letters Brown University 118 2013 Norman Mailer Prize Distinguished Writing 119 120 2017 Inducted into the American Academy of Arts and Letters 56 See also editDominican Americans in Boston Latino literature Weird fiction American literature Caribbean literature Speculative fictionReferences edit Terrie M Rooney 1998 Contemporary Authors Volume 161 Gale Research Co p 107 ISBN 9780787619947 Jefferson Tara March 28 2013 Junot Diaz Promotes Freedom University On The Colbert Report Anisfield Wolf Community Blog Retrieved June 18 2013 Bahr David December 8 2007 Immigrant Song Time Out New York Retrieved July 4 2011 2012 MacArthur Foundation Genius Grant Winners Associated Press October 1 2012 Archived from the original on June 30 2015 Retrieved October 1 2012 Loss Jacquelyn 2003 Junot Diaz In West Duran Alan ed Latino and Latina Writers New York City Charles Scribner s Sons pp 803 816 The Brief Wondrous Life of Junot Diaz So Far Splash of Red November 30 2009 Archived from the original on February 22 2014 Retrieved June 18 2013 Lopez Adriana V November 1 2008 The Importance of Being Junot A Pulitzer Spanglish and Oscar Wao Criticas Magazine Archived from the original on March 3 2010 Retrieved June 18 2013 Knight Henry Ace An Interview with Junot Diaz Asymptote Journal Retrieved April 30 2019 Tejada Miguel Cruz August 11 2008 Junot Diaz dice en RD hay muchos quirinos escribira obra inspirada en caso El Nuevo Diario in Spanish Archived from the original on August 22 2008 Retrieved August 25 2008 Hizo el bachillerato en el Cedar Ridge High School de Old Bridge Nueva Jersey en 1987 y se licencio en ingles en la Universidad Rutgers 1992 e hizo un Master of Fine Arts en la Universidad de Cornell Nerdsmith Adriana Lopez interviews Junot Diaz Guernicamag July 2009 Archived from the original on January 7 2012 Retrieved June 3 2012 Jasmine Garsd September 6 2012 Guest DJ Pulitzer Prize Winning Author Junot Diaz NPR music Alt Latino Retrieved September 13 2012 a b Interview Junot Diaz Talks Dying Art the Line Between Fact and Fiction and What Scares Him Most Complex December 17 2012 Retrieved May 1 2013 MIT Writing and Humanistic Studies Retrieved February 23 2012 Writing mit edu Retrieved June 3 2012 Masthead Boston Review Archived from the original on April 16 2019 Drake Olivia April 13 2009 Pulitzer Prize Winning Junot Diaz Speaks at Wesleyan Newsletter blogs wesleyan edu Retrieved June 3 2012 Swidey Neil December 23 2012 Acclaimed novelist Junot Diaz delivers Magazine The Boston Globe Retrieved May 1 2013 20 Under 40 The New Yorker June 14 2010 Retrieved June 17 2013 Q amp A Junot Diaz on writing Yunior and books that make him angry The Daily Pennsylvanian November 28 2012 Retrieved May 1 2013 Hay Festival Retrieved March 9 2010 Sneak Peeks Fiction DROWN Salon Archived from the original on April 15 2008 Retrieved April 8 2008 This American Life Episode 57 Chicago Public Media Archived from the original on September 30 2007 Retrieved April 8 2008 This American Life Episode 94 Chicago Public Media Archived from the original on April 12 2008 Retrieved April 8 2008 a b Kakutani Michiko September 4 2007 Travails of an Outcast The New York Times Retrieved April 8 2008 Gates David September 10 2007 From A Sunny Mordor to The Garden State Junot Diaz s first novel is worth all the waiting Newsweek Retrieved April 8 2008 Danticat Edwidge Fall 2007 Junot Diaz Bomb Archived from the original on November 12 2011 Retrieved July 27 2011 Grossman Lev August 24 2007 What to Watch For The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao Time Magazine Archived from the original on October 31 2007 Retrieved April 8 2008 Cheuse Alan August 28 2007 Diaz s First Novel Details a Wondrous Life NPR Retrieved April 8 2008 The Center for Fiction Mercantilelibrary org Archived from the original on May 31 2008 Retrieved June 3 2012 Junot Diaz wins big award for Oscar Wao CNN April 7 2008 Archived from the original on April 12 2008 Retrieved April 8 2008 Dempsey Laura April 9 2008 Dayton Literary Peace Prize winners announced Dayton Daily News Retrieved August 19 2010 8th Annual Massachusetts Book Awards May 14 2007 Archived from the original on July 20 2011 Retrieved August 19 2010 Awards Press Center gourmet com October 23 2006 Archived from the original on April 20 2007 Retrieved June 3 2012 Grossman Lev December 9 2007 Top 10 Fiction Books Time Online Archived from the original on December 12 2007 Retrieved April 8 2008 Anderson Sam December 6 2007 The Year in Books New York Magazine Retrieved April 8 2008 MLA 2008 Special Session on Junot Diaz Home fau edu December 27 2008 Retrieved June 3 2012 Junot Diaz A Symposium Ccsre stanford edu Archived from the original on March 25 2014 Retrieved June 3 2012 Poets amp Writers Announces Recipients of 2010 Writers for Writers Award and Editor s Award Poets amp Writers January 29 2010 Retrieved June 18 2013 Kakutani Michiko September 20 2012 Acclimating to America and to Women The New York Times Leah Hager Cohen September 20 2012 Love Stories The New York Times a b Barrett Annie February 27 2012 Oscar Wao author Junot Diaz announces new book Entertainment Weekly Retrieved November 19 2021 2012 National Book Awards National Book Foundation Nationalbook org Archived from the original on January 24 2017 Retrieved October 29 2012 Meatto Keith Still Drowning Junot Diaz This is How You Lose Her Archived from the original on November 10 2012 Pulitzer Winner Junot Diaz Gets 500 000 MacArthur Grant Businessweek October 2 2012 Archived from the original on October 11 2012 Retrieved October 29 2012 Flood Alison October 2 2012 MacArthur genius grants go to Junot Diaz and Dinaw Mengestu The Guardian London Retrieved October 29 2012 a b Junot Diaz wins MacArthur genius grant MIT News Office Web mit edu October 2 2012 Retrieved October 29 2012 Burleigh Nina October 9 2012 Junot Diaz Is WINNING The Author Collects Awards Like His Characters Bag Women The Observer Retrieved October 29 2012 Aldama Frederick Luis Mathew David Goodwin Monstro Latinx Rising An Anthology of Latinx Science Fiction and Fantasy ohiostatepress org Retrieved August 18 2020 a b Junot Diaz Aims to Fulfill His Dream of Publishing Sci Fi Novel With Monstro Underwire October 3 2012 Retrieved October 29 2012 Junot Diaz Aims to Fulfill His Dream of Publishing Sci Fi Novel With Monstro WIRED October 3 2012 Retrieved March 22 2015 Junot Diaz s This Is How You Lose Her Fall Preview 2012 New York Magazine August 27 2012 Retrieved October 29 2012 WORDS ON a WIRE Junot Diaz El Paso Tex KTEP FM June 7 2015 Islandborn by Junot Diaz at Penguin Random House MacPherson Karen March 9 2018 Junot Diaz says children s books lack diversity Washington Post a b Zapeda Mariana Emily Bary February 14 2013 Junot Diaz engages Newhouse audience Wellesley News Archived from the original on May 15 2013 Retrieved May 1 2013 Flood Alison January 20 2015 The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao declared 21st century s best novel so far The Guardian a b 2017 Newly Elected Members Press release New York N Y American Academy of Arts and Letters Junot Diaz On Becoming American Morning Edition National Public Radio November 24 2008 Accessed July 7 2009 Edwidge Danticat and Junot Diaz Op ed article permanent dead link in The New York Times November 20 1999 Kellogg Carolyn October 23 2015 Junot Diaz accused of being antidominicano by Dominican Republic consul in New York Los Angeles Times Retrieved October 23 2015 Franco Daniela October 23 2015 Dominican Consul Calls Author Junot Diaz Anti Dominican Revokes Medal NBC News Retrieved October 23 2015 Pulitzer org Bosman Julie May 24 2010 Diaz Joins Pulitzer Panel The New York Times Pulitzer Prize Board taps Dominican born writer Junot Diaz Dominican Today May 21 2010 Archived from the original on July 17 2012 Retrieved June 3 2012 Junot Diaz The DREAM Project Dominicandream org March 26 2013 Archived from the original on September 19 2014 Retrieved May 1 2013 Alter Alexandra Bromwich Jonah E Cave Damien May 4 2018 The Writer Zinzi Clemmons Accuses Junot Diaz of Forcibly Kissing Her The New York Times Stefansky Emma May 5 2018 Junot Diaz Withdraws from Writers Festival After Claims of Sexual Harassment Vanity Fair a b Winsor Morgan May 5 2018 Junot Diaz withdraws from writers festival amid allegations of sexual misconduct misogyny ABC News a b c d e Flaherty Colleen May 29 2018 Junot Diaz Feminism and Ethnicity Inside Higher Ed Villareal Alexandra May 5 2018 Author Junot Diaz Faces Sexual Misconduct Allegations Associated Press Silman Anna May 4 2018 Junot Diaz Responds to Allegations of Sexual Misconduct and Verbal Abuse The Cut Maher John May 4 2018 Diaz Accused of Harassment Bullying Publishers Weekly McClurg Jocelyn May 4 2018 Junot Diaz Pulitzer Prize winning author of Oscar Wao accused of sexual misconduct USA Today Arnold Amanda May 6 2018 Author Alisa Valdes on Junot Diaz He Mistreated Me and I Was Severely Punished for It The Cut a b Phillips Kristine May 6 2018 Pulitzer Prize winning author Junot Diaz accused of sexual misconduct misogynistic behavior The Washington Post Tempera Jacqueline May 8 2018 MIT looking into accusations of bullying unwanted sexual contact against Junot Diaz masslive com a b c d e Alter Alexandra June 19 2018 Junot Diaz Cleared of Misconduct by M I T The New York Times Grady Constance May 7 2018 Pulitzer winner Junot Diaz has been accused of forcibly kissing a woman and berating 2 others Vox a b c Shanahan Mark Ebbert Stephanie June 30 2018 Junot Diaz case may be a MeToo turning point The Boston Globe Author Junot Diaz withdraws from writers festival amid sexual misconduct allegations USA Today Associated Press May 5 2018 McHenry Jackson April 9 2018 Junot Diaz Pens Essay About Childhood Sexual Abuse It F cked Up My Whole Life Vulture Retrieved April 9 2018 Diaz Junot April 16 2018 The Silence The Legacy of Childhood Trauma The New Yorker Thorpe Vanessa Nevins Jake Harmon Steph May 5 2018 Junot Diaz withdraws from Sydney Writers festival following sexual harassment allegations The Guardian D Zurilla Christie May 4 2018 Acclaimed author Junot Diaz accused of sexual misconduct and virulent misogyny Los Angeles Times a b Shanahan Mark May 15 2018 Professors criticize media for handling of Junot Diaz allegations The Boston Globe a b Academics protest media harassment against Junot Diaz Associated Press May 14 2018 Open Letter Against Media Treatment of Junot Diaz The Chronicle of Higher Education May 14 2018 Alcoff Linda Martin May 16 2018 This Is Not Just About Junot Diaz The New York Times Junot Diaz Cleared in MIT Investigation The Boston Globe Retrieved June 19 2018 a b Romo Vanessa June 20 2018 MIT Clears Junot Diaz Of Sexual Misconduct Allegations NPR Harris Hunter Junot Diaz Cleared in MIT Sexual Misconduct Inquiry Vulture Retrieved June 19 2018 Literary journal retains Juno Diaz as fiction editor despite allegations of sexual misconduct The Boston Globe A Letter from Deborah Chasman and Joshua Cohen Boston Review June 5 2018 Retrieved June 19 2018 My MeToo Moment The Chronicle of Higher Education April 28 2023 Retrieved April 25 2023 Schaub Michael July 2 2018 Junot Diaz denies misconduct allegations his accusers respond Los Angeles Times Flood Alison July 2 2018 Junot Diaz says alleged sexual harassment didn t happen The Guardian Kiefer Halle July 1 2018 Junot Diaz Says He Was Shocked by Sexual Misconduct Allegations Against Him Vulture A Statement from the Pulitzer Prize Board New York N Y The Pulitzer Prizes Columbia University May 9 2018 Lucero Louis II May 10 2018 Junot Diaz Steps Down as Pulitzer Chairman Amid Review of Misconduct Allegations The New York Times Jacobs Julia November 16 2018 Junot Diaz Remains on Pulitzer Board After Review of Misconduct Allegations The New York Times Flood Alison November 19 2018 Junot Diaz welcomed back by Pulitzer prize after review into sexual misconduct claims The Guardian Latinx Rising An Anthology of Latinx Science Fiction and Fantasy ohiostatepress org Retrieved August 18 2020 Past Award Winners PEN Faulkner www penfaulkner org Archived from the original on May 14 2018 Retrieved May 10 2018 Irvine Lindesay April 8 2008 Junot Diaz wins Pulitzer The Guardian Retrieved May 10 2018 National Book Critics Circle NBCC Award Winners 2007 Critical Mass Blog bookcritics org Archived from the original on October 31 2010 Retrieved May 10 2018 Previous Short Novel Prize Shortlists The Center for Fiction Retrieved May 1 2013 Book Prizes Los Angeles Times Festival of Books 2007 Los Angeles Times Book Prize Winners Events latimes com May 1 2011 Archived from the original on April 24 2013 Retrieved May 1 2013 Award Winners Dayton Literary Peace Prize Retrieved May 1 2013 Winners by Year July 8 1971 Anisfield Wolf Book Awards Winners by Year Anisfield wolf org Retrieved May 1 2013 National Book Award Finalists Announced Today Library Journal October 10 2012 Archived from the original on December 6 2012 Retrieved November 15 2012 Publishers Weekly Best Books of 2012 Publishers Weekly Retrieved May 1 2013 Best Fiction 2012 Goodreads Choice Awards Goodreads com Retrieved May 1 2013 Kellogg Carolyn March 13 2013 Story Prize goes to Claire Vaye Watkins Los Angeles Times Retrieved May 1 2013 Claire Vaye Watkins wins U S Story Prize for short fiction Reuters March 13 2013 Retrieved May 1 2013 Claire Vaye Watkins wins 20 000 short story prize San Jose Mercury News Associated Press Retrieved May 1 2013 Flood Alison March 22 2013 Junot Diaz wins world s richest short story prize The Guardian London Retrieved March 23 2013 Celebs news Names The Boston Globe April 23 2013 Retrieved May 1 2013 Awards Shortlist Awards Grants and Scholarships Ala org Retrieved May 1 2013 Six to receive honorary degrees Brown Daily Herald April 25 2013 Retrieved May 1 2013 Italie Hillel October 17 2013 Maya Angelou accepts Mailer Center lifetime award Associated Press Williams John October 18 2013 Mailer Gala Honors Diaz Angelou and Its Divisive Namesake ArtsBeat The New York Times Company Further reading edit The Ethos of Writing Alexander Parsons Talks to Junot Diaz Literal Magazine January 14 2013 Planas Roque December 4 2013 Junot Diaz Speaks Out After Insults to His Dominican ness The Huffington Post Gonzalez Christopher 2017 Permissible narratives the promise of Latino a literature Columbus Ohio The Ohio State University Press ISBN 978 0 8142 1350 6 OCLC 975447664 On The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint postscript link External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Junot Diaz nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Junot Diaz Retro Report Junot Diaz and the D amp D Revolution Junot Diaz on playing Dungeons amp Dragons video Junot Diaz on the Muck Rack journalist listing site nbsp Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Junot Diaz amp oldid 1201239701, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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