'
Kevin Young, the Director of the
Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture and the Poetry Editor of The New Yorker, traces the history of the hoax as a peculiarly American phenomenon in his most recent nonfiction book,
Bunk: The Rise of Hoaxes, Humbug, Plagiarists, Phonies, Post-Facts, and Fake News. Young demonstrates that the contemporary smorgasbord of deception and fakery that refuses to get out of the headlines is part of a legacy of mendacity that goes back at least as far as the humbugs of the nineteenth century's great con artist and showman, P. T. Barnum. Young also makes the compelling case that the greatest and most insidious American hoax of them all is race. Young was joined in conversation by
Garnette Cadogan, a Fellow at the Institute for Advanced Studies in Culture at the University of Virginia, and a Visiting Scholar at MIT’s Department of Urban Studies and Planning and a Visiting Scholar at the Institute for Public Knowledge at New York University.'
Published on November 23, 2017 07:15