Rich Benjamin

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Rich Benjamin
Born
New York City, United States
Education Wesleyan University (BA)
Stanford University (PhD)
Occupation(s)Author, television commentator, cultural critic
Website richbenjamin.com

Rich Benjamin is an American cultural critic, anthropologist, and author. Benjamin is perhaps best known as a lecturer and a public intellectual, who has discussed issues on NPR, PBS, CNN and MSNBC. [1] His writing appears in The New York Times , [2] The New Yorker , [3] The Guardian [4] and The New York Review of Books . [5]

Contents

Career

Benjamin's work focuses on United States politics and culture, democracy, money, high finance, class, Artificial Intelligence, public policy, global cultural transformation, and demographic change. [3] [6]

Benjamin has been contributing essays to The New Yorker since 2017. [7]

Benjamin's book, Searching for Whitopia , was the subject of a TED Talk that has been viewed more than 2.8 million times and been translated into 25 languages. [8] [9]  The book has received coverage on NPR [10] and MSNBC. [11]

His scholarly research has received funding from the Rockefeller Foundation, the Ford Foundation, the Russell Sage Foundation, Brown University, and the National Endowment for the Humanities. In addition, Benjamin became a Fellow in the literary arts at the Bellagio Center, Rockefeller Foundation in 2020. [12]

In 2021 Benjamin delivered the Poynter Lecture at Yale Law School on "conservatism and Trumpism in the era of digital media—on how right-wing ideology, white fear, and the digital media ecosystem threaten democracy in America." [13]

He serves on the Board of the Authors Guild, the largest, oldest union of writers in the US that fights for authors’ rights, their commercial interests, and free speech. [8]

He has presented his research on money, blockchain, and decentralization at a conference on technology. [14]

In 2021, he served as a Fellow at the Cullman Center for Scholars and Writers at the New York Public Library. [15]

Benjamin was in Princeton, NJ in 2023 for his research and teaching post as the Anschutz Distinguished Fellow in American Studies at Princeton University. [16]

In 2023-2024, Benjamin served as a Harvard-Radcliffe Fellow at the Institute for Advanced Study at Harvard University. [17] There he continued research on his major field of interest, high finance—the social-scientific dimensions of quants, flash trading, hedge funds, extreme wealth, and risk. [18]  

Works

Rich Benjamin discussing Talk to Me with Nicholas Thompson, CEO of The Atlantic, at The New York Public Library, main stage February 2025 Thompson Benjamin.jpg
Rich Benjamin discussing Talk to Me with Nicholas Thompson, CEO of The Atlantic, at The New York Public Library, main stage February 2025

Searching For Whitopia

Benjamin is the author of two major nonfiction books and numerous essays, reviews, and opinion pieces across prominent U.S. publications. [18] According to a 2016 interview, Benjamin garnered information for Searching for Whitopia through immersive, firsthand research and quantitative data. During his research, he lived in several predominantly white, fast-growing communities, where he engaged residents everyday through activities like golf, poker, zoning meetings, and county town halls. The book is noted for its early exploration of exurban growth, white racial anxiety, and political polarization. [19] The book earned Editors’ Choice distinctions from Booklist and the American Library Association. [16]

Talk to Me

In 2025, Pantheon Books published Benjamin’s second major book, Talk to Me: Lessons from a Family Forged by History, a family memoir received “not only as a portrait of his family, but as a bold, pugnacious portrait of America.” [20] The book drew significant critical acclaim, including starred reviews from PublishersWeekly [21] , Kirkus Reviews [22] , and BookPage [23] . The book debuted with interviews of Benjamin on NPR’s Fresh Air with Terry Gross [24] , MSNBC’s The Beat with Ari Melber [1] , Brené Brown [25] , and BBC World Service [24] . Talk to Me blends archival research, political history, cultural criticism, and personal narrative reflecting Benjamin’s broader body of work on American identity and democracy. [15]

Education

As a doctoral student at Stanford University, Benjamin studied with Professors Tim Lenoir and Terry Winograd, an adviser to the founders of Google. Benjamin received his BA from Wesleyan University in Government and Literature and his PhD from Stanford University in Modern Thought and Literature. [12]

References

  1. 1 2 Melber, Ari (March 1, 2025), WHITOPIA Author Discusses Importance of New Book TALK TO ME , retrieved November 9, 2025
  2. Benjamin, Rich (2017), "The Ego in The Spectacle", The New York Times, retrieved August 15, 2019
  3. 1 2 Benjamin, Rich (April 4, 2018). "Gun Control and the Politics of White Paranoia". The New Yorker. Retrieved March 2, 2019.
  4. Benjamin, Rich (August 13, 2016). "Leading Writers on Donald Trump". The Guardian. Retrieved July 15, 2019.
  5. "Rich Benjamin". The New York Review of Books. Retrieved May 9, 2024.
  6. Benjamin, Rich (July 19, 2019). "Op-Ed: Trump's race-baiting hasn't produced many policy wins, but that was never the point". Los Angeles Times .
  7. The New Yorker (2022). "The New Yorker Contributors". The New Yorker .
  8. 1 2 "Rich Benjamin". Worth. Retrieved November 11, 2025.
  9. "Rich Benjamin". TED.
  10. NPR Radio Hour (November 20, 2015). "What is a Whitopia? And What Might It Mean to Live There?". NPR.
  11. MSNBC News (January 15, 2018). "How Does Race Play to Trump's Base?". YouTube.
  12. 1 2 "Rich Benjamin | The Italian Academy". italianacademy.columbia.edu. Retrieved November 11, 2025.
  13. Yale University Law School (January 15, 2022). "Whiteness, Conservatism, and Democracy in the Digital Age, Rich Benjamin, Poynter Lecture".
  14. New_Public (July 1, 2022). "Live from the Decentralized Web". New_Public.
  15. 1 2 New York Public Library (January 15, 2022). "Cullman Center for Writers and Scholars, NYPL".
  16. 1 2 "Past Anschutz Distinguished Fellows". Effron Center for the Study of America. Retrieved June 27, 2024.
  17. Nietzel, Michael T. "The Harvard Radcliffe Institute Has Named Its Fellows For 2023-24". Forbes. Retrieved June 27, 2024.
  18. 1 2 "Harvard Radcliffe Institute Announces 2023–2024 Fellowship Class". Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study at Harvard University. Retrieved June 27, 2024.
  19. Adaptation: Rich benjamin: What is A 'whitopia' — and what might it mean to live there? (2016). . Washington: NPR. Retrieved from https://proxy.library.georgetown.edu/login?url=https://www.proquest.com/blogs-podcasts-websites/adaptation/docview/2198634023/se-2
  20. Penguin Random House (February 11, 2025). "Talk to Me: Lessons from a Family Forged by History" . Retrieved November 14, 2025.
  21. Publishers Weekly (December 2, 2024). "Talk to Me: Lessons from a Family Forged by History". Publishers Weekly. Retrieved November 14, 2025.
  22. Kirkus Reviews (January 15, 2025). ""An Evocative, Wise Memoir of a Multilayered Search for Roots"". Kirkus Reviews. Retrieved November 14, 2025.
  23. BookPage (February 11, 2025). ""Rich Benjamin reckons with his family's exile from Haiti in his vivid, novelistic memoir, Talk to Me."" . Retrieved November 14, 2025.
  24. 1 2 "The Secret of My Grandfather: BBC World Service". BBC World Service. June 2, 2025. Retrieved November 14, 2025.
  25. Brown, Brené (February 16, 2025). "Five Questions with Rich Benjamin". Brené Brown. Retrieved November 14, 2025.