Robin Givhan

FASHION CRITIC AND STYLE WRITER

This site  The Web 

webassets/givhan14.jpg

OFF THE RUNWAY

Archive Newer | Older

Tuesday, December 14, 2010

Moving On

It's a bit of a cliche, but change really is good. After 15 years at the Washington Post writing about fashion as well as first lady Michelle Obama, I've decided to take a great leap of faith and move on. In January, I'll start as a style and culture correspondent for Newsweek and the Daily Beast. The decision reflects my enthusiasm for Tina Brown's vision of a reinvented Newsweek. It is the magazine that I'd want to read, one filled with stories that help us understand the world around us through the culture that we consume every day. I still believe in print. Words on paper satisfy and excite like nothing else.

The decision was so ridiculously hard and emotional to make. I've been at the Post a long time. I have close and dear friends there. And my colleagues and editors have shaped me as a journalist. No other newspaper would have allowed me to define fashion in such a broad way and I was lucky enough to have editors who believed in me and my work. They supported me even when the flood gates opened and outraged reader comments flooded through.

Anyone who is a writer understands what it means to have a close relationship with an editor. It's about so much more than the words on the page. Fundamentally, the relationship is grounded in trust. You trust your editor to pull you back from the abysss of self-indulgence and misguided notions. You also trust your editor to push you harder when you are ready to give up -- or worse, think your work is done when it has only just begun.

I've been supremely luck. The jerks in my career have been few and far between. And I think I've mostly managed to behave myself. Wink I've had supportive bosses. Inspiring colleagues. And I've had the best editors in the business, including one who edited me into a Pulitzer. There's a special place in editor - friend, confidante - heaven for Steve.

I'm excited about my new gig. And I'm properly nervous. I think that's a fine combination of emotions.  

11:36 pm est          Comments


Archive Newer | Older

UPCOMING EVENTS

Join me on May 11 in Washington, DC at "Suited for Spring" - a charity luncheon benefitting women re-entering the workforce

Podcast: "The Washington Catwalk: The Vivian R. Shaw lecture at the University of Michigan (Oct. 28, 2010)"

Robin Givhan

Create Your Badge


Biography

 

Robin Givhan grew up in Detroit, Michigan. She received her Bachelor of Arts in English from Princeton University and a Masters of Science in journalism from the University of Michigan.

 

In 1988, she began her career in journalism at the Detroit Free Press, where she was a general assignment entertainment writer. As the newest member of a section dominated by experienced critics, she was left to carve out her own niche: nightlife. She documented the rise of the techno music industry in Detroit.

 

She left Detroit for a brief stint as a feature writer at the San Francisco Chronicle, where among other topics she wrote about a local radio talk show host who successfully counseled teenagers in crisis over the airwaves.

 

She returned to Detroit as fashion editor in the early 1990s and moved to the Washington Post in 1995.

 

Since that time, she has been the fashion editor of the Washington Post where she covers the news, trends and business of the international fashion industry. Her work is distinguished by the way in which it examines fashion through the lens of popular culture, politics and social anthropology.

 

In 2009, she began covering Michelle Obama and the cultural and social shifts stirred by the first African American family in the White House.

 

She lives and works in Washington, DC. 

 

Her work has also appeared in Harper’s Bazaar, American Vogue, British Vogue, Marie Claire, Essence and the New Yorker. She has contributed to several books including “Runway Madness,” “No Sweat: Fashion, Free Trade and the Rights of Garment Workers” and “Thirty Ways of Looking at Hillary: Reflections by Women Writers.”

 

She has received numerous awards including several from the American Association of Sunday and Feature Editors. In 2007, she received the Eugenia Sheppard award for journlism from the Council of Fashion Designers of America. In 2006, she won the Pulitzer Prize in criticism for her fashion coverage.

 


In 2010, her book "Michelle: Her First Year As First Lady" was published in conjunction with the Washington Post.

webassets/pulitzer3.jpg

RECENT STORIES

Why Fashion Keeps Tripping Over Race

The American fashion industry has a hissy fit over the first lady's state dinner gown

FLOTUS wears McQueen at the State Dinner for China

New York Fall 2011: a big so-what.

London Fashion is Ready for the Spotlight

Paris Fashion in the Aftermath of Dior

Fashion's Mean Girls

Middleton Madness

The Dior Debaucle

Armani Goes Gaga

Fashion's New "It" Girl

I (heart) Constance!

Dowdy By Choice

Crime Victim Photos

The Supreme Black Robe

Fashion and the Burqa

The New Fashion Guard

Tom Ford Returns

The Essence Kerfuffle

FLOTUS and her vacation wardrobe

Stacy London and Style for Hire

The Meaning of Hillary's New Hairdo

Naomi vs. Charles Taylor

Enough About Chelsea's Wedding!

FLOTUS and the Arts: An Interview

Fatshionista Rebellion

The Fabulousness of Serena Williams

Wonder Woman!

Lady Gaga is not a Fashion Icon

100 Years of Zegna

Style Bullies

CFDA Awards

The Meaning of Jeans

FLOTUS in my hometown

Black Fashion Museum

Elena Kagan: The Column That Roiled the Blogosphere

History in a Closet

Not the Usual Bold Face Suspects

Waiting Tables at a State Dinner

The Mexico City Trip

What do First Ladies do when they go abroad?

A pitstop in Haiti

Michelle Obama in Mexico pt. 1

Michelle Obama in Mexico City pt. 2

Obesity Task Force Report

Costume Institute Exhibition: American Woman

The great Dorothy Height

Happy Easter

No Fashion Smackdowns

CFDA Awards

Fall 2010 Fashion Show Coverage

Alexander McQueen's Final Collection

Timing is Everything

Runways Online

Balenciaga et al.

Milan tussles with power dressing

Young designers hanging on!

Being a grown-up isn't easy

Defining American beauty

Bye-bye Bryant Park

Desiree Rogers: Victim of Fashion?

Alexander McQueen Dies

Katie Couric: Power Anchor

Figure Skating Madness

First Lady Announces: Let's Move

White House Welcomes a Young Man

FLOTUS and military families

The Weight Debate

Michelle Obama Interview

Eunice Johnson tribute

Michelle Obama's first year

The Obamas as pitchpeople

Sexism in the Tiger Woods scandal

Blonde Privilege

Desiree Rogers

Obama's first state dinner

Will commoners sit at the State Dinner?

State Dinner Fashion

John Allen Mohammad execution

Madeleine Albright's pins

PULITZER-PRIZE PORTFOLIO

In 2006, I became the first fashion writer to win a Pulitzer Prize for criticism.

These are the stories that were submitted to the judges.

Where to find me: 
Newsweek Daily Beast
1750 Pennsylvania Ave. NW
Suite 1220
Washington, DC 20006
202-626-2018

CONTACT ME

Powered by Register.com