Facebook Pixel The Radical Self-Awareness of Michael R. Jackson | The Atlantic - news - Lisez cet article sur Magzter.com

Essayer OR - Gratuit

The Radical Self-Awareness of Michael R. Jackson

The Atlantic

|

March 2024

He's become one of the most surprising and incisive-and misunderstood-social critics of our time.

-  Thomas Chatterton Williams

The Radical Self-Awareness of Michael R. Jackson

In the summer of 2020, the playwright Michael R. Jackson received an unusual message from a fan of A Strange Loop, his musical about a gay Black man’s path to creative self-awareness through the process of writing a musical about a gay Black man’s path to creative self-awareness. “Can I buy you a bulletproof vest?” the fan inquired over Instagram.

Jackson, who had just won a Pulitzer Prize for A Strange Loop and lived on a perfectly safe street in Upper Manhattan, had no more conceivable use for body armor or handouts than the next man. He told me about the proposal several months ago, over steak frites at Soho House, stressing its absurdity and presumptuousness. “Ur life matters so much. Ur writing matters so much. This is the most available and direct way I can think of protecting ur life and ur future plays,” the fan had explained.

In person, Jackson at first seems unassuming and even shy. He does not reflexively generate small talk. But he responds candidly and at length when asked a question about almost anything, and he is wickedly funny. In Jackson’s diagnosis, the fan in question was haplessly inspired by the racial reckoning then gripping the nation; he felt compelled to “show up” in the name of white allyship and antiracism. Jackson compromised with his would-be savior: For the benefit of the latter’s conscience, he’d accept the vest’s cash value of $400. The man promptly sent this sum to Jackson via Venmo.

This bizarre exchange was emblematic of an entire constellation of assumptions, biases, and misunderstandings that has proliferated in recent years and altered the way Jackson thinks of himself, his work, and American society more broadly. “Once the pandemic and the protest began, I suddenly was like, Oh

PLUS D'HISTOIRES DE The Atlantic

The Atlantic

The Atlantic

Deadlier Than Gettysburg

How the cruelty of the Confederacy's prison camps gave rise to the rules of war

time to read

10 mins

March 2026

The Atlantic

The Atlantic

THE MAN WHO BROKE PHYSICS

One of the pleasures of watching Ilia Malinin, apart from his indifference to gravity, is to witness him becoming.

time to read

16 mins

March 2026

The Atlantic

The Atlantic

How Toni Morrison Saw History

In her novels, she located the missing story of Black America.

time to read

12 mins

March 2026

The Atlantic

The Atlantic

The Madness of Lord Tennyson

The Victorian poet was startlingly modern.

time to read

5 mins

March 2026

The Atlantic

The Atlantic

THE PLOT AGAINST THE HUMANITIES

What is the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation doing to higher education?

time to read

22 mins

March 2026

The Atlantic

The Atlantic

Why Do Democrats Hate Winning?

Ken Martin has one of those resting dread faces, as if he's bracing for someone to dump a bucket of rocks on his head.

time to read

37 mins

March 2026

The Atlantic

The Atlantic

ROD DREHER'S DEMONS

HE DERIDES THE ENLIGHTENMENT, SECULARISM, AND THE MODERN WORLD. CONSERVATIVES-INCLUDING THE VICE PRESIDENT-ARE JOINING HIM ON A MARCH BACK TO THE MIDDLE AGES.

time to read

20 mins

March 2026

The Atlantic

The Atlantic

Every Nation for Itself

President Trump wants to return to the 19th century's international order. He will leave America less prosperous—and the whole world less secure.

time to read

19 mins

March 2026

The Atlantic

The Atlantic

The Secrets of Indigenous Art

Major exhibits are upending the way people understand Native American and Aboriginal artists.

time to read

14 mins

March 2026

The Atlantic

The Atlantic

The Novel as Extended Op-Ed

If anyone could write good fiction about immigration, it would probably be Lionel Shriver. Instead, her latest book goes off the rails.

time to read

10 mins

March 2026

Listen

Translate

Share

-
+

Change font size