8. The magazine's treatment on race has to be contextualized in its historical role as voice of technocratic Ivy League liberalism
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Replying to @HeerJeet
9. From inception in 1914, TNR was magazine for Harvard graduates (Croly, Lippmann) who wanted to lead progressive coalition.
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10. With the rise of the new social movements of the 1960s, there was society wide push for inclusiveness on gender and race lines.
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11. The push for greater inclusiveness had intense salience in left and Democratic party.
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12. What distinguished Peretz's TNR is that it resisted this new push for inclusiveness, both ideologically and in hiring practices.
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13. Peretz's TNR makes sense as attempt to progressive coalition the same as it was under Croly/Lippmann: a Harvard boy's club.
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14. Here's the think I noticed even as a teenage reader of TNR: it had far less non-white and female voices than even the conservative mags
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16. National Review & Commentary had Jeanne Kirkpatrick, Midge Decter, Linda Chavez, Tom Sowell, etc. TNR much more white male
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17. As far as I know, in its entire history TNR has had two black staffers. The excellent Dayo Olopade was one.
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18. RT
@tomscocca Not just resisted, but countered. That inclusiveness had gone too far was its '80s-'90s guiding principle.2 replies 0 retweets 5 likes
19. As @tomscocca rightly notes, TNR actively tried to counter inclusiveness.
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20. This push against inclusiveness & attendant hiring practices explains core problem of TNR on racism: its indifference to black voices
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21. In 1986 TNR published thought experiment: you run jewelry store, black man comes to door late at night, do you let him in?
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