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Seth Abramson

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Seth Abramson
Abramson in 2016
Abramson in 2016
Born (1976-10-31) October 31, 1976 (age 48)
Concord, Massachusetts, U.S.
OccupationAttorney, professor, author
EducationDartmouth College (BA)
Harvard University (JD)
University of Iowa (MFA)
University of Wisconsin–Madison (MA, PhD)
GenreCuratorial journalism, metajournalism, poetry
Literary movementMetamodernism

Seth Abramson (born October 31, 1976) is an American professor, attorney, author, political columnist, and poet. He is the editor of the Best American Experimental Writing series and wrote a bestselling trilogy of nonfiction works detailing the foreign policy agenda and political scandals of former president Donald Trump.

Early life and education

Abramson is a graduate of Dartmouth College (1998), Harvard Law School (2001), the Iowa Writers' Workshop (2009), and the doctoral program in English at University of Wisconsin–Madison (2010; 2016).[1]

Career

Abramson was a trial attorney for the New Hampshire Public Defender from 2001 to 2007. Abramson became an assistant professor of communication arts and sciences at University of New Hampshire in 2015, and was made affiliate faculty at the New Hampshire Institute of Art in 2018.[2] His teaching areas include digital journalism, post-internet cultural theory, post-internet writing, and legal advocacy.

Abramson has written for publications like The Washington Post, Dallas Morning News, The Seattle Times, Newsweek, Indiewire, and The Guardian. In 2011, Publishers Weekly wrote that he had "picked up a very large following as a blogger and commentator, covering poetry, politics, and higher education, and generating a controversial, U.S. News–style ranking of graduate programs in writing."[3] During the Trump administration, Abramson was a CNN legal analyst.[4]

Writing about American politics

During the 2016 Democratic primary race between Hillary Clinton and Bernie Sanders, Abramson supported Sanders.[5] He authored what Jonathan Chait of New York Magazine called "a cult-favorite series of Bernie [Sanders] delegate-math fan fiction."[6] Philip Bump of The Washington Post took issue with Abramson's analyses, calling them "empty theory, unproven...but innovative."[7] Writing in The Chicago Tribune, Stephen Stromberg called Abramson a "Sanders zealot...[in] reality-denial."[8] The Atlantic, citing an article by Abramson in which he referred to his writing on the Democratic primary as "experimental journalism," attributed Abramson's articles not to his political leanings but his self-identification as a "metamodernist creative writer."[9][10] Politico concurred, referring to Abramson's political commentary as "verses from the abstract."[11]

After the 2016 U.S. presidential election, Abramson received widespread attention for his Twitter threads alleging collusion between the Trump campaign and foreign governments, especially Russia, but also Saudi Arabia, the UAE, and Israel.[12] According to The Washington Post:

"After trying for many years to expand his business empire into Russia, Abramson asserts, Trump visited Moscow in 2013 to personally meet agents of Russian President Vladmir Putin, using his beauty pageant as cover. There, Abramson writes, a secret deal was struck: Putin agreed to open up his country's rich real estate market to Trump, and Trump agreed to campaign for president while promoting pro-Russian policies."[13]

In November 2018, Abramson published the New York Times bestselling book Proof of Collusion (Simon & Schuster), which sought to establish "proof of collusion in the Trump-Russia case."[14] Kirkus Reviews called the book "spirited, thorough, and thunderously foreboding."[15] A contrary view appeared in the Herald (Scotland), noting that "suggestive juxtapositions notwithstanding, we end up with something closer to the Scottish 'not proven' verdict with its unique mix of moral conviction of guilt and inability to conclusively prove the case."[16]

A sequel to Proof of Collusion, Proof of Conspiracy, was published by St. Martin's Press in September 2019, and was also a New York Times bestseller.[17] The final book in the Proof trilogy, Proof of Corruption, was published by St. Martin's Press in September 2020 and was named a USA Today bestseller.[18] Kirkus Reviews called Proof of Corruption "careful and exhaustive," concluding that it makes a "strong case for Trump's outsized, boundless corruption."[19]

In October 2020, Abramson, former Vice contributing editor Thomas Morton, and Connect3 Media (a division of Cineflix) published a ten-episode, limited-series pre-election podcast, Proof: A Pre-election Podcast Special, to summarize key aspects of the "Proof" book trilogy. Abramson thereafter launched a Substack publication entitled Proof.[20]

Creative writing and editorship

Abramson has published a number of poetry books and anthologies. Colorado Review called Northerners, Abramson's second collection of poetry, "alternately expansive and deeply personal...of crystalline beauty and complexity," terming Abramson "a major American voice,"[21] and Notre Dame Review echoed the sentiment.[22]

Abramson and poet Jesse Damiani have been series co-editor of the annual anthology of innovative verse, Best American Experimental Writing, since its inception with Omnidawn in 2012.[23][24] The series was picked up by Wesleyan University Press in 2014.[25] Guest editors for the series have included Cole Swensen (2014), Douglas Kearney (2015), Charles Bernstein and Tracie Morris (2016), Myung Mi Kim (2018), and Carmen Maria Machado and Joyelle McSweeney (2019).[26]

The MFA Research Project

Between 2007 and 2014, Abramson authored The MFA Research Project (MRP), a website that published indexes of creative writing Master of Fine Arts (MFA) programs based on surveys and other data.[27] Indexes appearing on the MRP included ordered listings of program popularity, funding, selectivity, fellowship placement, job placement, student-faculty ratio, application cost, application response times, application and curriculum requirements, and foundation dates. The MRP also published surveys of current MFA applicants and various creative writing programs.

The Chronicle of Higher Education termed the Poets & Writers national assessment methodology "comprehensive" and "the only MFA ranking regime."[28][29] Writing for The Cambridge Companion to American Poetry Since 1945, Hank Lazer described Abramson's project as "a daring and data-rich endeavor."[30] The Missouri Review observed that Abramson, along with novelist Tom Kealey, "had done a tremendous amount of work to peel back the layers of MFA programs and get applicants to make informed decisions."[31]

The data was not without its critics. In September 2011, a critical open letter signed by professors from undergraduate and graduate creative writing programs was published.[32] Data from the MRP had been regularly published by Poets & Writers between 2008 and 2013. The magazine's Editorial Director Mary Gannon said of Abramson, the rankings' primary researcher, that he "has been collecting data about applicants' preferences and about MFA programs for five years, and we stand behind his integrity."[33]

Reception

Poetry

Publishers Weekly describes Abramson as "serious and ambitious... uncommonly interested in general statements, in hard questions, and harder answers, about how to live."[34] Abramson won the 2008 J. Howard and Barbara M.J. Wood Prize from Poetry. Editor Don Share said of Abramson's "What I Have," "The poem absorbs certain details but doesn't fasten upon them the way poets are tempted to do; it's not adjectival, it's not descriptive, it's not painting a kind of canvas with scenery on it, and yet those details are really fascinating."[35]

Journalism

In 2019, a Playboy interviewer said "Abramson helped pioneer the literary form of the Twitter 'thread'" and, speaking of his 2018 book Proof of Collusion, credited "the eccentric New Hampshirite" for "his meticulous attention to the evidence of Trumpworld's alleged collusion with the Kremlin."[36] His style of writing was described by Playboy as "left-brained gonzo."[36] Avi Selk of The Washington Post wrote that Abramson became "virally popular by reframing a complex tangle of public reporting on the Russia scandal into a story so simple it can be laid out in daily tweets", that his analysis has "many leaps", and that his sources "range in quality from investigative news articles to off-the-wall Facebook posts and tweets from Tom Arnold".[13]

Writers at The New Republic and The Atlantic have described Abramson as a conspiracy theorist.[37][38] Ben Mathis-Lilley of Slate argues that Abramson is "not making things up" but "recycling information you could find on any news site and adding sinister what-if hypotheticals to create conclusions that he refers to... as 'investigatory analyses.'"[39] An article in Columbia Journalism Review similarly critiqued Abramson's method of "curatorial journalism."[40]

Other media outlets have supported Abramson's analyses. The Chronicle of Higher Education notes that Abramson often "feuds with anti-Trump conspiracy theorists whom he sees linking to dubious sources and making claims without evidence."[41] Virginia Heffernan writes in Politico that Abramson's "theory-testing" is "urgently important."[42] Der Spiegel calls Abramson "a quintessential American figure: an underdog who became an involuntary hero."[43] The New York Observer writes that "events like Trump's 2013 trip to Russia for Miss Universe were covered extensively on Abramson's feed prior to the mainstream media catching on, a fact that has given him a reputation for being early to connect events within the broader Russia story."[44]

Awards

Selected works

Books

Nonfiction

Reference

  • The Creative Writing MFA Handbook [Contributing Author] (Continuum Publishing, 2008)
  • The Poets & Writers Guide to MFA Programs [Contributing Author] (Poets & Writers, 2011)
  • An Insider's Guide to Graduate Creative Writing Degrees (Bloomsbury, 2018)

Poetry

Anthology

Podcasts

  • Proof: A Pre-Election Special [Co-Host] (Cineflix, 2020)

Anthologies

Academic

  • After the Program Era: The Past, Present, and Future of Creative Writing in the University (University of Iowa Press, 2017)

Prose

Poetry

References

  1. ^ Plenda, Melanie (2015-03-24). "Acclaimed Author and Poet Seth Abramson joins UNH Manchester English Program". University of New Hampshire at Manchester. Archived from the original on 2018-05-25.
  2. ^ New Hampshire Institute of Art (2018-06-05). "Seth Abramson Joins NHIA MFA Faculty". Retrieved 2018-06-23.
  3. ^ Review of Northerners, Publishers Weekly (May 2011)
  4. ^ Review of Proof of Collusion, Publishers Weekly (November 2018). [1]
  5. ^ "Sanders backers worry that Clinton will clinch nomination before California's polls close," The Washington Post, David Weigel (May 31, 2016). [2]
  6. ^ "Wall Street Journal Editorial Page Feels the Bern," New York Magazine, Jonathan Chait (May 12, 2016). [3]
  7. ^ "Sorry, Bernie supporters. Your candidate is not 'currently winning the Democratic primary race,'" The Washington Post, Philip Bump (March 23, 2016). [4]
  8. ^ "Bernie Sanders, enough with your 'political revolution,'" The Chicago Tribune, Stephen Stromberg (June 1, 2016). [5]
  9. ^ "This Is How a Revolution Ends," The Atlantic, Molly Ball (May 26, 2016). [6]
  10. ^ "On Bernie Sanders and Experimental Journalism," The Huffington Post, Seth Abramson (May 23, 2016) [7]
  11. ^ "The 2016 Blast," Henry C. Jackson, Politico (March 23, 2016)
  12. ^ Heffernan, Virginia. "The Rise of the Twitter Thread". POLITICO Magazine. Retrieved 2019-05-07.
  13. ^ a b Selk, Avi (December 6, 2017). "People can't stop reading a professor's theory of a Trump-Russia conspiracy — true or not". The Washington Post. Retrieved May 25, 2018.
  14. ^ "Combined Print & E-Book Nonfiction NYT Bestsellers for December 2, 2018". www.nytimes. Retrieved 27 November 2018.
  15. ^ "Review: Proof of Collusion: How Trump Betrayed America, by Seth Abramson". Kirkus Reviews. Retrieved 2021-05-17.
  16. ^ "Review: Proof of Collusion: How Trump Betrayed America, by Seth Abramson". HeraldScotland. Retrieved 2019-04-07.
  17. ^ "Combined Print & E-Book Nonfiction NYT Bestsellers for September 21, 2019". www.nytimes. Retrieved 29 November 2019.
  18. ^ "USA Today Bestsellers for September 17, 2020". www.usatoday.com. Retrieved 3 October 2020.
  19. ^ "Review: Proof of Corruption: Bribery, Impeachment, and Pandemic in the Age of Trump, by Seth Abramson". KirkusReviews. Retrieved 2020-10-03.
  20. ^ "Proof". Substack. Retrieved 2021-05-19.
  21. ^ Northerners (review), Colorado Review
  22. ^ "From Ruin to Rebirth," Notre Dame Review
  23. ^ "Best American Experimental Writing Anthology Announced," The Poetry Foundation (November 12, 2012). [8]
  24. ^ "Announcing Omnidawn's New Annual Anthology, Best American Experimental Writing," Omnidawn (November 7, 2012). "Announcing Omnidawn's new annual anthology, Best American Experimental Writing". Archived from the original on 2013-02-21. Retrieved 2012-11-21.
  25. ^ "Best American Experimental Writing: Guidelines for Submitting," Wesleyan University Press (April 17, 2014). [9]
  26. ^ "Best American Experimental Writing," Wesleyan University Press (November 20, 2017). [10]
  27. ^ "Protected Blog ' Log in". mfaresearchproject.wordpress.com. Retrieved 22 June 2018.
  28. ^ "What Defines a Successful Post-M.F.A. Career?", The Chronicle of Higher Education (November 3, 2011). [11]
  29. ^ "M.F.A. Application-Season Etiquette," The Chronicle of Higher Education. [12]
  30. ^ "American Poetry and Its Institutions," The Cambridge Companion to American Poetry Since 1945 (February 8, 2013) [13]
  31. ^ "The MFA Degree: A Bad Decision?", The Missouri Review (August 29, 2011). [14] Archived 2014-04-19 at the Wayback Machine
  32. ^ "Creative Writing Profs Dispute Their Ranking. No, the Entire Notion of Ranking!", The New York Observer, Kat Stoeffel (September 8, 2011). [15]
  33. ^ "Poets & Writers Responds to Open Letter". Poets & Writers. 13 September 2011. Retrieved 13 September 2011.
  34. ^ Northerners, Publishers Weekly (Review)
  35. ^ "You're Always Moving Toward Silence," Poetry (March 2009 Poetry Foundation Podcast). [16]
  36. ^ a b Interview with Seth Abramson. Playboy (March 2019)
  37. ^ Dickey, Colin (8 June 2017). "The New Paranoia". The New Republic. Retrieved 2017-07-03.
  38. ^ McKay Coppins (2017-07-02). "How the Left Lost Its Mind". The Atlantic. Retrieved 2018-05-25.
  39. ^ Ben Mathis-Lilley (2017-12-05). "Democrats: Please, Please Stop Sharing Seth Abramson's Very Bad Tweets". Slate. Archived from the original on 2018-05-25.
  40. ^ Lenz, Lyz (February 11, 2021). "Thread Man". Columbia Journalism Review. Retrieved 21 February 2021.
  41. ^ Kolowich, Steve (2017-05-15). "What Is Seth Abramson Trying to Tell Us?". The Chronicle of Higher Education. ISSN 0009-5982. Retrieved 2017-07-03.
  42. ^ Virginia Heffernan (September–October 2017). "The Rise of the Twitter Thread". Politico. Retrieved 2018-05-25.
  43. ^ Christoph Scheuermann (June 4, 2018). "Army of Investigators Has Trump in Its Sights". Der Spiegel. Retrieved 2018-06-22.
  44. ^ Mike Albanese (June 21, 2018). "Seth Abramson Is Combating Trump and the Media on Twitter". New York Observer. Retrieved 2018-06-22.
  45. ^ "Poetry Foundation of Chicago Prizes", Poetry Foundation of Chicago, retrieved May 17, 2021
  46. ^ "Seth Abramson", Academy of American Poets, retrieved May 17, 2021
  47. ^ "Akron Poetry Prize Winners", University of Akron, retrieved May 17, 2021
  48. ^ "NCJT list of 238 most respected journalists" (PDF), NCTJ, October 11, 2018, retrieved October 11, 2018