Emily Nussbaum '88 Awarded Pulitzer Prize
May 16, 2016
Lisa Gulasy
The 2016 Pulitzer Prize
Emily Nussbaum ’88, television critic for The New Yorker, has been awarded the 2016 Pulitzer Prize for Criticism. The prize is awarded annually “for distinguished criticism, using any available journalistic tool,” and comes with a prize of $10,000.
Nussbaum has written about television shows “The Good Wife,” “Scandal,” and “Girls,” the latter of which was created by and stars fellow Oberlin College alumna Lena Dunham ’08. Her standout essays on Joan Rivers, P. Jay Sidney, advertising, and “Mad Men” were among the pieces submitted to the Pulitzer committee. According to the Pulitzer citation, the committee selected Nussbaum for this honor “for television reviews written with an affection that never blunts the shrewdness of her analysis or the easy authority of her writing.”
Nussbaum worked as an editor and writer for New York magazine for seven years prior to joining The New Yorker staff. She is the recipient of the 2014 National Magazine Award for Columns and Commentary for her essays “Shark Week,” "Difficult Women,” and “Private Practice.”
Nussbaum is the second Oberlin alumni to be selected for a Pulitzer Prize in recent years. In 2014, Vijay Seshadri ’74 won the Pulitzer Prize for Poetry for 3 Sections.
See The New Yorker archives to read more of Nussbaum’s work and follow her on Twitter @emilynussbaum.
You may also like…
Nuiko Wadden ’02 Joins Oberlin Conservatory Faculty as Assistant Professor of Harp
The versatile musician brings extensive opera, orchestral, and contemporary music experience to her role
Leo Hidy ’23 Earns 2026 Marshall Scholarship
Leo Hidy ’23, a comparative American studies major who also studied business and economics while at Oberlin, has received a 2026 Marshall Scholarship that will fund two years of graduate study in the UK.
Amy Lee Joins Oberlin Conservatory Faculty as Associate Professor of Violin
The renowned violinist and associate concertmaster of the Cleveland Orchestra brings extensive teaching and performing experience to Oberlin