Zadie Smith on Politics, Turning Fifty, and Mind Control
13 snips
Oct 27, 2025 Zadie Smith, acclaimed novelist and essayist known for works like *White Teeth* and *Dead and Alive*, dives deep into the intricate relationship between politics and personal reflection. She explores how digital platforms manipulate public discourse and admits that we are all impacted by this 'mind control.' Smith also contrasts youthful exuberance with her mature insights, discusses the role of essays in slowing down thought, and highlights class divides in screen exposure, advocating for regulatory measures to protect children's development.
AI Snips
Chapters
Books
Transcript
Episode notes
Essays As Slow Listening
- Zadie Smith values essays as a mode of careful listening and slower reflection compared with daily media churn.
- She treats essays as spaces to process ideas away from constant information pressure.
Defending Fiction's Imaginative Reach
- Fiction's voice is diffuse and cannot be reduced to simple claims about who may portray whom.
- Smith resists 'stay in your lane' thinking, arguing fiction should imaginatively appropriate across differences.
Interview Pushback On Appropriation
- Smith recounts interview reactions to On Beauty where nobody called Howard cultural appropriation.
- She felt hurt by the one-directional expectation that writers of color must be vulnerable to appropriation claims.













