This content was originally published by CONCEPCIÓN DE LEÓN on 5 May 2017 | 9:33 pm.
Source link
Photo
Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie
Credit
Vladimir Weinstein/BFA.com
Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie, a feminist icon and mainstay in conversations about women’s equality, did not originally intend for her newly released book, “Dear Ijeawele; Or, A Feminist Manifesto in Fifteen Suggestions,” to be published. It started first as a private letter to a friend who sought Ms. Adichie’s advice on how to raise her newborn daughter “so she doesn’t take the kind of nonsense that I took,” before being published on her Facebook page and now, finally, in print.
In a TimesTalks conversation on Thursday, The New York Times’s editorial director for books, Radhika Jones, spoke with Ms. Adichie about her reasons for making her words public, what has surprised her about motherhood — she now has her own daughter — and why there’s something to be said about sexism being “refreshingly obvious” in her native Nigeria.
Video of the interview is below.
TimesTalks: Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie Video by TimesTalks
Continue reading the main story
Source link
The post In Conversation With Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie appeared first on Art of Conversation.
Published on May 06, 2017 01:42