2022
June
14
Tuesday

Monitor Daily Podcast

June 14, 2022
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April Austin
Weekly Deputy Editor, Books Editor

As a people watcher, I try to imagine the lives of those whose paths cross mine. I devour biographies with a similar desire to know the details of someone’s life. 

A biographer’s role is “helping readers bridge the gap between their experience and a life from the past,” says Megan Marshall, winner of this year's Biography International Organization Award.

Ms. Marshall has written three biographies of extraordinary women, including “Margaret Fuller: A New American Life,” which won the Pulitzer Prize in 2014. 

In the case of Fuller, a 19th-century journalist, feminist, and colleague of Ralph Waldo Emerson, “she had a vision for herself that really didn’t exist [in society].”

When readers see themselves and their times reflected in a biography, it can give them perspective, Ms. Marshall says. “There is so much to be worried about and so much that seems hopeless. But if you … look at other times when there seemed to be no hope ... you’ll see how people rose up anyway,” she says. “That is one of the most important things a biographer can do.”

She continues, “Just seeing how people renewed their hope, what right do we have to give up when people in extremely dire situations used whatever tools were available to them to try to make a difference?” 

Readers may wonder how one person can change the trajectory of a society. Ms. Marshall explains the concept of a “trim tab,” a favorite idea of inventor Buckminster Fuller, a grandnephew of Margaret Fuller. “A huge steamship or an airplane will have a trim tab, and just moving it the slightest bit can alter the direction,” she says. “I like to think that someone like Margaret Fuller or Buckminster Fuller could just make a little difference in the huge stream of life.

“We can take those messages of those who didn’t give up,” she says. “Alternatively, you can learn from people who didn’t make it. Everyone is worthy of remembrance and ... every life is a gift. And what you do with that gift is up to you.”


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Migrants arrive at the Port of Dover after being rescued while crossing the English Channel, June 14, 2022. Tuesday was to mark the start of a controversial new program, which aims to send adult migrants who arrive illegally in Britain to Rwanda while their asylum cases are being heard. The get-tough program is intended as a deterrent, British Prime Minister Boris Johnson has said.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Jacob Turcotte and Karen Norris. )

A look ahead

Thanks for joining us today. Coming tomorrow: Many are struggling to find bare necessities in Cuba. We explore how the island’s residents show a creative solidarity that is bridging gaps.

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