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âCoddling of the American Mindâ Wins David Brooksâ âSidney Awardâ
New York Times columnist has chosen ââ as a winner of his annual Sidney Awards, honoring the yearâs best long-form essays in politics and culture.
The essay, written by FIREPresident and CEO Greg Lukianoff and New York University professor and psychologist Jonathan Haidt, graced the cover of Septemberâs issue of The Atlantic. The piece remained among The Atlanticâs most popular stories for months after it was published, and has been shared more than 500,000 times on Facebook. President Obama even referenced language used in the piece earlier this year, telling a crowd at an education town hall meeting with the idea âthat you when you become students at colleges, you have to be coddled and protected from different points of view.â
The winners were announced this morning:
David Brooks' Sidney Awards, Part 1: The yearâs best long-form essays
â NYT Opinion (@nytopinion)
Brooks had high praise for ââ:
This was the most important article this year on student hypersensitivity, the way some students seek safe spaces in case they are assaulted by microaggressions. The authors invent the apt term âvindictive protectivenessâ to capture this mind-set and describe how this mental state leads to depression and leaves students unprepared for the real world.
Brooks has been giving Sidney Awardsânamed after philosopher and political theorist â.
You can read about the other nominees on .
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