Jane Yong Kim
@janewhykim
deputy editor @theatlantic | words at @bookforum, @parisreview, @bombmagazine, @latimes
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http://www.janeyongkim.com 25-08-2008 18:50:53
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Been thinking a lot lately about the way the attention economy affects our viewing habits, so I called up some TV superfans who turned TV-watching into something resembling work, spreadsheets and all. ICYMI, my dive into the trend, for The Atlantic: theatlantic.com/culture/archiv…
"When she talked about the stories we tell ourselves in order to live, she wasn’t offering a gauzy pronouncement. She was issuing an indictment." - Megan Garber on Didion is one gorgeous sentence after another, each of which her subject would have loved theatlantic.com/culture/archiv…
I’m in love with this feature by Faith Hill about the ultra-introverts who live their lives nocturnally and the questions they raise about how “universal” the need for social connection really is: theatlantic.com/family/archive…
1/ They lost their son on 9/11. A father dove into his grief. A mother pushed hers away. Twenty years later, it’s changed them both. Read Jennifer Senior's Pulitzer Prize-winning story about one family's grief. theatlantic.com/magazine/archi…
PSA: new short story by Ling Ma in The Atlantic to start your morning!!! theatlantic.com/books/archive/…
The Atlantic has always been a destination for great writers and for those who love literature. That’s why we’re making books a much bigger part of what we do, Jane Yong Kim writes: on.theatln.tc/g8yMeFJ
I wrote for The Atlantic about how our end-of-life laws continue to define "family" using a dated, 1950s framework. When someone dies without a will, it's unmarried partners, non-adopted children, and other nontraditional families that are left behind: theatlantic.com/family/archive…
Two LA women - Jane Yong Kim, a native and me, a transplant - talk about that girl who lived in Hollywood and Malibu, and who changed everything. youtube.com/watch?v=Pewf4j…
The Supreme Court has ruled that the Constitution does not protect the right to an abortion. The main difference between the women who will make it to an abortion provider in a post-Roe world and those who won’t? Money, Melissa Jeltsen wrote in May. on.theatln.tc/G897vfd
A potent portrait of social alienation, "No Longer Human" still reads with an apt urgency. Jane Yong Kim on Osamu Dazai's cult classic, 75 years after it was first published: theatlantic.com/books/archive/…