Graeme_Wood_(journalist)

Graeme Wood (journalist)

Graeme Wood (journalist)

American journalist


Graeme Charles Arthur Wood (born August 21, 1979, in Polk County, Minnesota) is an American staff writer for The Atlantic and a lecturer in political science at Yale University since 2014.[1] Prior to his staff writer position he was a contributing editor to The Atlantic,[2] and he has also written for The Cambodia Daily,[3] The New Yorker,[4] The American Scholar, The New Republic, Bloomberg Businessweek, Culture+Travel, The Wall Street Journal and the International Herald Tribune. He served as books editor of Pacific Standard.[3] He was awarded the 2015-2016 Edward R. Murrow Press Fellowship of the Council on Foreign Relations[5] and a 2009 Reporting Fellowship Grant from the South Asian Journalists Association.[6]

Quick Facts Born, Alma mater ...

In 2017, he won the Canadian Governor General's Award for English-language non-fiction, which he was eligible for due to holding Canadian citizenship,[7] for his book The Way of the Strangers: Encounters with the Islamic State[8] and was a visiting fellow at the University of Pennsylvania's Perry World House.[9][10]

Wood was born in Polk County, Minnesota.[11] He grew up in Dallas and graduated from St. Mark's School of Texas in 1997.[12] He spent a year studying Arabic Language at American University in Cairo, and also studied central Asian languages at Indiana University and Deep Springs College before transferring to Harvard College to study African-American Studies and Philosophy, graduating in 2001.[13]


References

  1. "Author page". Yale University. Archived from the original on March 23, 2015. Retrieved October 6, 2012.
  2. "Author page". The Atlantic. Retrieved October 6, 2012.
  3. "Graeme Wood | The Pearson Institute". thepearsoninstitute.org. Retrieved 2023-08-06.
  4. "Historical Roster of CFR's Edward R. Murrow Press Fellows". Council on Foreign Relations. Retrieved 2023-08-06.
  5. "Minnesota Birth Index". Retrieved May 15, 2017.
  6. Wood, Graeme. "Richard Spencer Was My High-School Classmate". The Atlantic. No. June 2017. Retrieved May 15, 2017.
  7. Adam A. Sofen (2000). "Transfers From Deep Springs College Face Unique Transition". Retrieved April 1, 2015.



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