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  1. Donna Zuckerberg is an American classicist, feminist, and writer. She is author of the book Not All Dead White Men (2018), about the appropriation of classics by misogynist groups on the Internet. She was editor-in-chief of Eidolon, a classics journal, until its closure in 2020. [1] [2] She is a sister of Facebook co-founder and CEO Mark ...

  2. Donna Zuckerberg is a writer and editor. She received her Ph.D. in Classics from Princeton University in 2014. According to a (very negative) review of her first book—Not All Dead White Men: Classics and Misogyny in the Digital Age (Harvard University Press, 2018)—in Quillette, she became “arguably… the most influential scholar of Greek and Latin literature in America” as editor-in ...

  3. Donna Zuckerberg is a Silicon Valley–based classicist who received her doctoral training at Princeton University. She is the founder and Editor-in-Chief of Eidolon, a prize-winning online Classics magazine (www.eidolon.pub).

  4. Donna Zuckerberg is a writer and former academic who explores myths, classics, and culture in her Substack newsletter. Read her irreverent and insightful takes on topics such as Fair Play, Pompeian frescoes, eclipses, and more.

  5. Dec 29, 2023 · Some Perfect Things I Read This Year. Donna Zuckerberg. Dec 29, 2023. Share. I read a fuckton of queer memoirs and I have no regrets. At some point during the pandemic I stopped reading books. My concentration and focus were so shot to hell that anything over 3,000 words felt like an unmanageable slog. It took me an entire two weeks trapped in ...

  6. Donna Zuckerberg dives deep into the virtual communities of the far right, where men lament their loss of power and privilege and strategize about how to reclaim them. She finds, mixed in with weightlifting tips and misogynistic vitriol, the words of the Stoics deployed to support an ideal vision of masculine life.

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  8. Mar 8, 2023 · Backlash: Misogyny in the Digital Age tells the stories of four women leaders who faced online harassment and threats. The film also interviews Donna Zuckerberg, a classicist and author who explains how misogyny draws on ancient texts to justify racism and antifeminism.

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