Founder(s) | Ibram X. Kendi and Bina Venkataraman |
---|---|
Publisher | Boston University and The Boston Globe |
Editor-in-chief | Deborah D. Douglas and Amber Payne |
Founded | April 2022; 2 years ago (2022-04) |
Headquarters | Boston, MA |
Website | theemancipator |
The Emancipator is an online newspaper on topics of racial justice, co-founded by Ibram X. Kendi of Boston University and Bina Venkataraman of The Boston Globe.
Development
Ibram X. Kendi of Boston University and Bina Venkataraman of The Boston Globe met during the 2020 American protests for racial justice and shared a mutual interest in Boston's 19th-century abolitionist newspapers. They discussed William Lloyd Garrison's The Liberator and what a contemporary iteration would be like, modeled on Garrison's urgency and anti-gradualist approach to abolition.
In 2021, they began to assemble an online newspaper on the model of CBS's The 19th. They received a budget from their institutions and sought new individual and foundation donors. The name "The Liberator" had already been trademarked by a Christian nonprofit, so Kendi and Venkataraman chose "The Emancipator" based on another 19th-century abolitionist newspaper.
The Emancipator was launched in April 2022, with journalists Deborah D. Douglas and Amber Payne as co-editors-in-chief.
References
- ^ Smith, Ben (March 21, 2021). "He Redefined 'Racist.' Now He's Trying to Build a Newsroom". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331.
- Alston, Paris; Siegel, Jeremy (April 29, 2022). "'An urgent moment': Why The Boston Globe and BU resurrected the abolitionist newspaper The Emancipator". Morning Edition. WGBH.
- Payne, Amber; Douglas, Deborah D. (April 24, 2022). "Editors' Letter: The Return of The Emancipator". BostonGlobe.com.
Further reading
- Elkind, Elizabeth (March 18, 2021). "Why The Emancipator, a 19th-century antislavery newspaper, is getting a modern-day revival". CBS News. Retrieved March 28, 2021.
- Treisman, Rachel (March 16, 2021). "Venture Aims To 'Resurrect And Reimagine' Anti-Slavery Newspaper For The 21st Century". NPR.org. Retrieved March 28, 2021.