The Atlantic

The <em>American Dirt</em> Controversy Is Painfully Intramural

Novels can change minds, but this novel won’t.
Source: Flatiron Books

Imagine if a controversial novel about a treacherous border crossing triggered a papal homily, or even a presidential tweet. Either scenario would suggest that public leaders are reckoning with the migrant crisis anew, thanks to a risk-taking work of fiction. Novels can have this power. Jeanine Cummins’s new novel American Dirt does not. The controversy the novel has provoked is not the controversy its subject needs.

The asymmetry of Cummins’s identity (she’s white and not an immigrant) and story (a Mexican woman’s flight to the United States with her son) has led to charges of racial and cultural appropriation and publishing-industry whitewashing. Cummins has noted that poses in its presumption to represent the migrant experience. Making matters worse, the novel is a commercial success: It won a seven-figure advance and was optioned for a film adaptation amid broader industry buzz, and it’s an Oprah Book Club selection. In response to criticism, Oprah has promised that her treatment of will also involve a conversation about “who gets to publish what stories.” Oprah’s decision to frame the debate on these insular terms is telling. This is fundamentally a fight about an industry; it’s about how book publishers do business, and with whom.   

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from The Atlantic

The Atlantic3 min read
The End of Biden’s Candidacy Approaches
At the start of the day yesterday, it was conceivable that Joe Biden might manage to hold on to the Democratic nomination for president. But this morning, things seem to be slipping out of his grasp. The blows to Biden were both procedural and politi
The Atlantic4 min read
J. D. Vance’s Permanent Grin
J.D. Vance’s speech at the Republican National Convention completed his transformation from Never-Trumper to Trump’s MAGA torch-bearer. Vance dutifully spent his first five minutes praising the GOP leader sitting in front of him. “Consider the lies t
The Atlantic6 min read
Why You Should Trust Your Gut
Want to stay current with Arthur’s writing? Sign up to get an email every time a new column comes out. If you are looking for a job right now, you’re not alone. According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, last month, 6.8 million Americans were not e

Related Books & Audiobooks