Discipline: Literature – nonfiction

Thomas Chatterton Williams

Discipline: Literature – nonfiction
Region: Paris, FRANCE
MacDowell Fellowships: 2016

Thomas Chatterton Williams is a contributing writer at The Atlantic and the author of Losing My Cool and Self-Portrait in Black and White. He is a Visting professor of humanities and senior fellow at the Hannah Arendt Center at Bard College, a 2022 Guggenheim fellow, and a visiting fellow at AEI. He was previously a contributing writer at The New York Times Magazine and a Columnist at Harper’s. His work has appeared in the New Yorker, the London Review of Books, Le Monde and many other places, and has been collected in The Best American Essays and The Best American Travel Writing. He has received support from New America, Yaddo, MacDowell, and The American Academy in Berlin, where he is a member of the Board of Trustees. His next book, Nothing Was the Same: The Pandemic Summer of George Floyd and the Shift in Western Consciousness, will be published by Knopf.

While at MacDowell, Thomas worked on his second nonfiction book, a reckoning with how we define race in America. It is an expansion of his essay Black and Blue and Blond, originally published in the Virginia Quarterly Review and republished in The Best American Essays 2016.

Studios

Sorosis

Thomas Chatterton Williams worked in the Sorosis studio.

Sorosis Studio was funded by the New York Carol Club of Sorosis. The small, masonry studio was designed by F. Winsor, Jr., the architect who also designed Savidge Library (1926) and Mixter Studio (1927). At the time of construction, the large porch on the southeast façade offered a spectacular mountain view that has since been obscured…

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