John is back for another installment of our ongoing conversation. The weather is changing and the fall semester has started. Perhaps that’s why I find myself in a meditative mood this week. I spent a lot of my summer talking about the past in interviews and conversations about my memoir, Late Admissions. And now I’m looking ahead to a new phase in my life, where the annual rhythms that have shaped my sense of time’s progression are about to shift. This is a moment to step back and consider where I am and where I’m going.
And speaking of changes, regular viewers will notice that I’m recording from my new studio set-up. It’s been a long time in the making, and it’s going to allow me to add some new features to the show. More on that in due time. In the first half of the conversation, John and I wrestle with one of the big issues: time. Nine months from now, I’ll be retiring from teaching after nearly a half-century as a university professor, and John is currently on sabbatical from Columbia. We’ve got time on our hands. How can we use it meaningfully? In the second half of the conversation, we talk about the first class of post-affirmative action college students. Between that, the public turn against DEI, scandals within Black Lives Matter, and a host of other developments, we may well be on the cusp of a new era in our racial politics. And finally, we end by considering the dispute between Thomas Chatterton Williams, the novelist Danzy Senna, and the New Yorker magazine.
This post was released on Monday to paying subscribers and is now unlocked. To receive early access to TGS episodes, an ad-free podcast feed, Q&As, and other exclusive content and benefits, click below.
The Dispatch: Home for the Politically Homeless
Are you tired of sensationalized news that prioritizes outrage? Consider signing up for The Dispatch.
The Dispatch provides engaged citizens with fact-based reporting and commentary on law, policy, and culture—informed by conservative principles. More importantly, they created a community and forum for intelligent discussion among the “politically homeless” that’s one of the more high-minded comments sections on the Internet.
Join 400,000+ loyal readers and make The Dispatch your news home.
The Glenn Show readers: Claim your exclusive 30-day, all-access FREE trial today.
0:59 Glenn debuts his new studio
2:34 Life after academia
13:02 The challenge of having a lot of time on your hands
18:10 John’s new musical endeavors
20:20 Ground News ad
22:38 John’s forthcoming book, Pronoun Trouble: The Story of Us in Seven Little Words
25:07 Glenn and John form an impromptu book club
29:43 The first class of post-Students for Fair Admissions college freshmen
36:22 Are black students being shut out of the upper echelons of American society?
40:33 The Supreme Court’s “indirect beneficial endowment” to HBCUs
46:42 Glenn: “The wheel is turning” on race politics in America
52:18 ACTA ad
54:26 Plagiarism in Robin DiAngelo’s dissertation
57:02 John: I don’t recognize the world that Danzy Senna and Ketanji Brown Jackson describe, even though I lived in it
1:04:07 Did Thomas Chatterton Williams really say what he said to Danzy Senna?
Recorded September 8, 2024
Links and Readings
The Rest Is History on Apple Podcasts
Preorder John’s forthcoming book, Pronoun Trouble: The Story of Us in Seven Little Words
David Kaiser’s book, States of the Union: A History of the United States through Presidential Addresses, 1789-2023
David Kaiser discusses his book States of the Union on TGS
Sari Nusseibeh’s memoir, Once Upon a Country: A Palestinian Life
David Greenberg’s forthcoming book, John Lewis: A Life
Danzy Senna’s novel, Colored Television
Percival Everett’s novel, James
Ketanji Brown Jackson’s memoir, Lovely One
John’s book, Losing the Race: Self-Sabotage in Black America
Thomas Chatterton Williams’s book, Self-Portrait in Black and White: Unlearning Race
Share this post