Katharine Viner

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Person.png Katharine Viner  Rdf-entity.pngRdf-icon.png
(Journalist, editor)
Katharine Viner.jpg
Born1951
Member ofScott Trust Ltd/Board
The first female editor-in-chief of The Guardian

Employment.png Guardian/Editor

In office
1 June 2015 - Present
Preceded byAlan Rusbridger

Katharine 'Kath' Viner (born 1971)[1] became the first female editor-in-chief at The Guardian on 1 June 2015, succeeding Alan Rusbridger.[2][3]

Kath Viner is a British journalist and playwright who headed the Guardian's web operations in Australia, moved to New York in September 2014 to take up responsibility for the Guardian's online presence in the United States, and shortly after was selected for the editor-in-chief's position.[4]

Early life

Raised in Yorkshire, the daughter of teachers, Katharine Viner was educated at Ripon Grammar School,[5] where she was head girl.[6] Her first newspaper article (for The Guardian) was published in 1987 on the ending of the GCE O level examinations - they were being replaced in the UK by the General Certificate of Secondary Education (GCSE), while she was still at school,[7] "Cramming five years of knowledge into two and a half hours does not seem to be a fair system," she wrote. Around 1988, Viner had a period of work experience at the Ripon Gazette, her local newspaper.[8][9]

Subsequently Viner read English at Oxford University/Pembroke College. Just before her finals, Viner won a competition organised by The Guardian women's page and was advised by Louise Chunn, then Guardian women's editor, to pursue a career in journalism. "I honestly thought journalism wasn't for me, I thought it was for men in suits in London", she remembered in 2005.[10] During her 20s, Viner spent most of her holidays in the Middle East, a region for which she has a particular interest, spending time in Lebanon, Syria, Israel, the West Bank and other locations.

Journalism

Kath Viner initially joined Cosmopolitan, a women's monthly magazine, for work experience, but was retained afterwards, becoming features assistant and then news and careers editor. After 3 years at The Sunday Times, working as a commissioning editor and writer for the magazine.

Viner joined The Guardian in 1997. Following a period on the staff of the women's page, she became editor of the Saturday Weekend supplement in 1998. She became features editor in 2006[11] and deputy editor in 2008 at the same time as Ian Katz.[12] Viner edited the Saturday edition of The Guardian from 2008 to 2012. Laura Slattery in The Irish Times, reviewing Viner's career up to March 2015, noted that she "has almost always been the person who does the commissioning, [rather than] provided the byline".[13] Several Guardian pieces by Viner published during this period are reprinted in an anthology drawn from the Guardian archive entitled Women of the Revolution: Forty Years of Feminism (2010), edited by Kira Cochrane.[14]

Based in Australia and New York

In January 2013, Viner's relocation to Sydney to supervise a new Guardian digital edition in Australia was announced;[15] this venture was launched in May 2013.[16]

Kath Viner delivered the AN Smith Lecture in Journalism at the University of Melbourne in October 2013.[17][18] D. D. Guttenplan, London correspondent of the American The Nation magazine, wrote in March 2015 that "there is no one on either side of the [Atlantic] ocean who has thought as deeply as Viner about the relationship between readers, technology and the future of journalism."[19] Guttenplan is not totally convinced by Viner's "eagerness to transcend print" in the move to digital media, but commenting about her 2013 speech in Australia, he writes that "her arguments for the importance of reader engagement, and for sustained, original reporting of information that someone, somewhere, wants to keep secret are compelling and convincing."

In the summer of 2014, Viner moved to New York and became the new head of The Guardian American website in succession to Janine Gibson. Viner remained deputy editor of Guardian News & Media.[20]

Editor-in-chief of the Guardian

In March 2015, Kath Viner won a majority in the ballot of The Guardian and Observer editorial staff as the favoured successor of Alan Rusbridger as the Guardian's editor-in-chief. Viner received 53% of first-choice votes from the 964 staff who participated, and was thus shortlisted for selection.[21] Former deputy editor and rival,[22] Ian Katz (editor of the BBC's Newsnight television programme since 2013), was also on the final short list of two.[23]

Kath Viner was appointed editor-in-chief on 20 March 2015, the first woman to be the editor of The Guardian in its 194-year history, and assumed her new post on 1 June 2015.[24] She intends to make the "media organisation" a "home for the most ambitious journalism, ideas and events" which is able to reach "out to readers all around the world."[25]

It has been suggested by former Guardian columnist Michael Wolff that another of Viner's rivals to succeed Rusbridger, Janine Gibson, suffered because of internal disquiet over the internal impact on The Guardian of the Edward Snowden revelations which Gibson edited in New York.[26] Peter Wilby, writing in the New Statesman, preferred a different explanation: "Viner is a more charming, more inclusive and less threatening figure than Janine Gibson, who started as the bookies’ and Rusbridger’s favourite."[27] Paul Blanchard writing for The Huffington Post thought that "Viner's appointment is inspired and in 20 years' time there's every sign that we'll look back and find that her achievements have eclipsed those of Rusbridger."[28]

Other work

Outside journalism Kath Viner is known for My Name Is Rachel Corrie, a play she co-edited with actor Alan Rickman from the writings and emails of Rachel Corrie, an American activist who was killed by a bulldozer operated by the Israeli Army in Rafah, Gaza in 2003.[29][30] The play was first performed at the Royal Court Theatre in 2005. Viner was a judge in the Orange Prize for Fiction in 2004[31] and was on the board of the Royal Court Theatre for 13 years.[32]

 

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Document:The Assange Arrest is a Warning From HistoryArticle12 April 2019John PilgerLeni Riefenstahl, close friend of Adolf Hitler, whose films helped cast the Nazi spell over Germany told me that the message in her films, the propaganda, was dependent not on “orders from above” but on what she called the “submissive void” of the public: "When people no longer ask serious questions, they are submissive and malleable. Anything can happen.”
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References

  1. Katharine Viner "Dear diary ...", The Guardian, 27 November 2004
  2. "The World's 100 Most Powerful Women #80 Katharine Viner", Forbes, [26 May 2015]
  3. "Guardian appoints Katharine Viner as editor-in-chief", The Guardian, 20 March 2015
  4. Profile page, The Guardian
  5. "General Information: A short history of Ripon Grammar School", Ripon Grammar School
  6. "Former Ripon Grammar head girl appointed first female editor-in-chief of the Guardian", Ripon Grammar School
  7. Dominic Ponsford "New Guardian editor Katharine Viner's challenge: What to do with 964 staff and £850m", Press Gazette, 24 March 2015
  8. "Top editor gives inspirational talk at Grammar School speech day", Ripon Gazette, 9 November 2005
  9. David Prior "Former Ripon Gazette work experience girl is new editor of The Guardian", Ripon Gazette, 23 March 2015
  10. Julie Tomlin "‘It’s good to feel scared from time to time’", Press Gazette, 6 May 2005
  11. Dominic Ponsford "Guardian aims big guns at web", Press Gazette, 3 February 2006
  12. Laura Oliver "Guardian News & Media names Paul Johnson as deputy editor", Journalism.co.uk, 6 August 2008
  13. Laura Slattery "Katharine Viner to balance news and 'fun' at the Guardian", Irish Times,
  14. This includes an article by Viner reflecting on Misconceptions, a book by feminist author Naomi Wolf concerning Wolf's first experience of childbirth, and other aspects of her career, See Katharine Viner "Stitched up", The Guardian, 1 September 2001, reprinted in Kira Cochrane (ed.) Women of the Revolution: Forty Years of Feminism, London: Guardian Books, 2010 [2012 ebook], p.165ff
  15. Mark Sweney "Guardian News & Media to launch digital Australia edition", guardian.co.uk, 15 January 2013
  16. "Guardian News & Media announces senior editorial changes", theguardian.com (press release), 6 March 2014
  17. Katharine Viner "The rise of the reader: journalism in the age of the open web", The Guardian, 9 October 2013. The article includes a link to the University of Melbourne video of Viner's speech.
  18. "A.N.Smith Lecture in Journalism 2013", University of Melbourne
  19. D.D. Guttenplan "The Changing of 'The Guardian'", The Nation, 23 March 2015
  20. Ravi Somaiya "Guardian to Make Management Changes", New York Times, 6 March 2014
  21. "Katharine Viner wins staff ballot for Guardian editor", theguardian.com, 5 March 2015
  22. Peter Preston "Enter Katharine Viner at the Guardian: new editor, old hand", The Observer, 22 March 2015
  23. Adam Sherwin "Katharine Viner appointed editor-in-chief of the Guardian", The Independent, 20 March 2015
  24. Stephen Castle and Ravi Somaiya "Guardian Names Katharine Viner as New Editor", New York Times, 20 March 2015
  25. Henry Mance "Katharine Viner appointed Guardian editor", Financial Times, 20 March 2015
  26. Michael Wolff "Snowden effect hits 'Guardian'", USA Today, 20 March 2015
  27. Peter Wilby "Labour in a trap, Cameron’s decade debacle, democracy at the Guardian and Leicester’s losers", New Statesman, 8 April 2015
  28. Paul Blanchard "What Does Katharine Viner's Appointment Mean for the 'Guardian'", The Huffington Post, 28 March 2015
  29. Katharine Viner "'Let me fight my monsters'", The Guardian, 8 April 2005
  30. Peter Beaumony "Rachel Corrie's family loses wrongful death appeal in Israel's supreme court", The Guardian, 13 February 2015
  31. Katharine Viner "Read 'em and weep", The Guardian, 9 June 2004
  32. John Harrington "The Guardian names Katharine Viner as first female editor-in-chief", PR Week, 20 March 2015

External links

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