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Subject: The New York Times Magazine: When the Revolution Came for Amy Cuddy
Date: Fri, 20 Oct 2017 21:06:16 +0000
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-The New York Times
The New York
Times
Thursday, October 19, 2017
Amy Cuddy has fans — a lot more of them than a social psychologist might expect.
They approach her in airports, on ski slopes and in long lines after her talks,
waiting to hug her or to thank her. After her 2010 study on the effects of "power
poses" led to a best-selling book and a popular TED Talk — the second-most-
viewed in the institution's history — people began sharing with Cuddy how bold
body language helped them win jobs, confront bullies or seize power. Then came a
sea change in her field, and a new type of scrutiny for her work. In this week's
cover story, Susan Dominus writes about how Cuddy went from near-universal
acclaim to the face of a painful reckoning in a discipline struggling to adjust to
new standards of evidence.
Elsewhere in the magazine, Jason Zengerle writes about Rex Tillerson's State
Department adrift in a world where a president can unravel international
relationships one tweet at a time. Michael Erard writes about Unicode's quiet
mission to bring the world's neglected languages into the digital sphere — and
what happened to it when emoji came along. And Dan Kois profiles Taika Waititi,
the eccentric indie filmmaker at the helm of the superhero blockbuster "Thor:
Ragnarok."
Happy reading,
Jake Silverstein
Editor in Chief
EFTA00711485
ustration by Alec
7!
When the Revolution Came for Amy
Cuddy
By SUSAN DOMINI •
As a young social psychologist, she played by the rules and won big: an influential study, a
viral TED talk, a prestigious job at Harvard. Then, suddenly, the rules changed.
Illustrations by Kelsey Dake
Rex Tillerson and the
Unraveling of the State
Department
With an isolated leader, a demoralized diplomatic
corps and a president dismantling international
relations one tweet at a time, American foreign
policy is adrift in the world.
Emily Shur for The New York Times
The Superweirdo Behind
`Thor: Ragnarok'
h. 1).1N Kuu
To revamp the most boring superhero in the
Marvel pantheon, the company turned to an
eccentric indie filmmaker from New Zealand. Will
Americans like the view inside Taika Waititi's
head?
My Wife Found My Sexy Phone Pics
and Won't Let It Go
h,
\ ANIE AN I IONl APPIAll
The magazine's Ethicist columnist on the nature of forgiveness and
more.
EFTA00711486
In Pursuit of Cartoonish Perfection
in a Japanese Rice Bowl
II) 1
B.1O
Katsudon — a bowl of rice topped with slices of pork cutlet, onions
and barely cooked eggs — can be transcendent.
ADVERTISEMENT
a
n by Mai, B,rfman
How the Appetite for Emojis
Complicates the Effort to
Standardize the World's Alphabets
By M ICI IA El. MARI
Do the volunteers behind Unicode, whose mission is to bring all human languages into the
digital sphere, have enough bandwidth to deal with emojis too?
EFTA00711487
Illustration by Andrew Rae
Photo illustration by Derek Brahne)
North Korea Is No Longer Why Is `Politicization' So
the Hermit Kingdom — but Partisan?
How Long Will China Be
11.NNIi 1.1::, / LAI
Its Lifeline?
Accusations of "politicizing" may seem like
mudslinging but reflect deeper assumptions about
By BROOK I.ARNIER
what is objective truth.
The country's peculiar trading entanglements
make sanctions possible. Will its longtime enabler
finally make them enforceable?
Bree Newsome Thinks Allies Should
Be Protesting
Interview by ANA MARIE COX
The activist on the intersection of faith and politics and the
importance of white protesters in Charlottesville.
For Ana Marie Cox, Goodbyes Can
Be Awkward
By ANA MARIE COX
Sunday marks her last back-page interview for The Magazine's
"Talk" column. This time, she's the one doing the introspection.
2
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EFTA00711488
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EFTA00711489
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