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Daphne Merkin
Daphne Merkin
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Daphne Merkin

Daphne Miriam Merkin (born May 30, 1954)[1] is an American literary critic, essayist and novelist. Merkin is a graduate of Barnard College and also attended Columbia University's graduate program in English literature.[2]

She began her career as a book critic for the magazines Commentary,[2] The New Republic, and The New Leader, where she wrote a book column and later, a movie column.[2] In 1986, she became an editor with the publishing house of Harcourt Brace Jovanovich. In 1997, after Tina Brown became editor of The New Yorker, Merkin became a film critic for the magazine. She also wrote extensively on books and became known for her frank forays into autobiography; her personal essays dealt with subjects ranging from her battle with depression, to her predilection for spanking,[3] to the unacknowledged complexities of growing up rich on Park Avenue. In 2005, she joined The New York Times Magazine as a contributing writer. She is the author of a novel, Enchantment (1984)[2] as well as two collections of essays, Dreaming of Hitler (1997)[4] and The Fame Lunches (2014),[5] and a memoir, This Close to Happy: A Reckoning With Depression (2017).[6] Her latest novel, 22 Minutes of Unconditional Love (2020),[7] came out in July 2020.

Her parents were the philanthropists Hermann and Ursula Merkin. Her brother is J. Ezra Merkin, a hedge fund manager and philanthropist who was embroiled in the Bernie Madoff scandal.[8]

Merkin teaches writing at the 92nd Street Y.[9] She married and divorced Michael Brod, and lives on the Upper East Side of Manhattan with her daughter, Zoe. She also is a contributing editor to Tablet magazine.[10]

References

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from Grokipedia
Daphne Merkin is an American novelist, essayist, memoirist, and literary critic known for her candid, introspective explorations of deeply personal and cultural themes, including depression, family dynamics, sexuality, religion, psychotherapy, celebrity, and the interplay between high and low culture. A native New Yorker, she was born and raised in the city, attended the Ramaz School, graduated magna cum laude from Barnard College, and pursued graduate studies in English literature at Columbia University. Merkin began publishing criticism at age 21 and built an extensive career as a contributor to major publications, including The New Yorker—where she served as a staff writer covering books, films, and personal essays—along with The New York Times Magazine, ELLE, The New York Times Book Review, The New Republic, Vogue, Bookforum, and others. She has profiled prominent figures across literature, film, and fashion, and her work often bridges literary analysis with cultural commentary on topics such as women's issues, money, beauty, and Judaism. In addition to her journalism, Merkin has worked in publishing as a senior editor at Harcourt Brace Jovanovich and has taught writing and literature at institutions including Barnard College, Columbia University's MFA program, Hunter College, Marymount Manhattan College, and the 92nd Street Y. Her published books include the novels Enchantment (1986), which received the Edward Lewis Wallant Award, and 22 Minutes of Unconditional Love (2020); the memoir This Close to Happy: A Reckoning with Depression (2017); and the essay collections Dreaming of Hitler: Passions & Provocations (1997) and The Fame Lunches: On Wounded Icons, Money, Sex, The Brontës, and the Importance of Handbags (2014), the latter named a New York Times Notable Book. Merkin's writing has appeared in numerous anthologies and earned recognition in collections such as The Best American Essays, reflecting her influence across literary and cultural discourse. She lives in New York City.

Early life and education

Family background

Daphne Merkin was born on May 30, 1954 in New York City into a prominent and affluent Orthodox Jewish family. Her parents, Hermann Merkin and Ursula Merkin, were German Jewish refugees who fled Nazi Germany before World War II and established themselves as notable philanthropists in New York's Jewish community. Her father, Hermann Merkin, was a successful financier, investment banker, and shipping magnate who played a leading role in Orthodox Jewish life as the founder and first president of the Fifth Avenue Synagogue and a generous supporter of Jewish institutions and charities in New York and Israel. Her mother, Ursula Merkin, descended from a line of rabbis and was also active in philanthropic efforts within the Jewish community. Merkin grew up as the fourth of six children in a wealthy household on Park Avenue in Manhattan, where the family occupied a duplex apartment with a curving staircase and employed household staff including a chauffeur, cook, and nanny. The family also maintained a summer home, first in Long Beach and later in Atlantic Beach, New York, reflecting their comfortable socioeconomic position within New York Jewish society. Among her siblings is her older brother J. Ezra Merkin, who later became a hedge fund manager. This privileged upbringing in an Orthodox Jewish environment marked by family philanthropy, religious observance, and complex attitudes toward wealth has provided context for Merkin's explorations of money, privilege, and family dynamics in her essays and memoir.

Education and early influences

Daphne Merkin attended the Ramaz School and graduated magna cum laude from Barnard College. She subsequently attended Columbia University's graduate program in English literature. Merkin's early entry into literary criticism began while she was still young, as she published her first piece of criticism in Commentary magazine at the age of twenty-one. In her early twenties, she contributed regularly to The New Leader, writing a bi-weekly book column followed by a film column, which helped establish her voice as a cultural critic. These initial forays into publishing, alongside reviews in publications such as The New Republic, marked the formative phase of her development as a writer and thinker.

Career

Early journalism and publishing roles

Daphne Merkin's early career involved contributions to book criticism and roles in book publishing. She began by publishing book reviews in The New Republic and The New York Times Book Review, establishing herself as a literary critic. A review she wrote for The New Republic prompted her first fan letter from Woody Allen, an encouraging response that highlighted her emerging voice in criticism. While attending graduate school at Columbia University, she also wrote book reviews for Commentary, alongside continued work for The New York Times Book Review and The New Republic. Before committing fully to writing, Merkin spent five years at the publishing house Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, where she served as a senior editor and later as associate publisher. In these roles, she acquired and edited works of fiction and nonfiction. She transitioned to a staff writer position at The New Yorker in 1997.

Work at The New Yorker

Daphne Merkin became a staff writer at The New Yorker in 1997. In this capacity, she alternated writing the magazine's movie column with Anthony Lane, contributing film criticism that appeared alongside his in "The Current Cinema" section. She also published book reviews and pieces on literature, while producing personal and cultural essays that frequently incorporated autobiographical candor to examine intimate or controversial subjects. Her work for the magazine included features on such figures as Marilyn Monroe, Courtney Love, and the legacy of Sigmund Freud, blending cultural analysis with personal reflection. Among her notable earlier contributions to The New Yorker is the 1996 personal essay "Unlikely Obsession," in which she candidly confronted her longstanding fascination with erotic spanking as a taboo subject. Certain essays from her New Yorker period were later selected for inclusion in anthologies such as The Best American Essays.

Contributions to other publications

Daphne Merkin has sustained a wide-ranging career as a contributor to numerous publications beyond her association with The New Yorker. She has long served as a contributing writer for The New York Times Magazine and T Magazine, where she wrote a bi-monthly column titled "The Way We Live Now." Merkin has also been a frequent contributor to Elle, Tablet, The Wall Street Journal, Bookforum, and The Times Literary Supplement, among others including Allure, Travel & Leisure, and Departures. Her work for these outlets encompasses profiles of prominent figures such as Madonna and Martha Wainwright for Elle, Taylor Swift for Allure, and designers including Dries van Noten, Raf Simons, and Stella McCartney. She has explored fashion and cultural topics including women's fascination with handbags and lip gloss, the aesthetic notion of "jolie laide," anxieties about aging and cosmetic surgery, and broader gender issues. Merkin's essays and reflections in these venues have also addressed public personalities such as Hillary Clinton, Michelle Obama, and the Kardashian family, alongside more literary excursions like visits to Virginia Woolf's lighthouse in Cornwall and the Brontë sisters' home in Haworth.

Teaching and academic involvement

Daphne Merkin has taught writing at several institutions in New York. She has taught writing classes at the 92nd Street Y, Marymount Manhattan College, Hunter College, and Columbia University's MFA program in creative writing. She has also taught at Hunter College's Writing Center. Merkin has held adjunct academic positions related to her teaching. She serves as an Adjunct Associate in the English Department at Barnard College, where she teaches classes on writing and literature. She has been an Adjunct Associate Professor at Columbia University's School of the Arts. In addition to her institutional teaching, Merkin conducts private writing classes.

Literary works

Novels

Daphne Merkin has published two novels. Her debut novel, Enchantment, was published in 1986 by Harcourt Brace Jovanovich. The book won the Edward Lewis Wallant Award for the best new work of fiction based on a Jewish theme that same year. Its first chapter originally appeared in The New Yorker. The novel was reprinted by Picador in July 2020 with a foreword by Vivian Gornick. Merkin's second novel, 22 Minutes of Unconditional Love, was published in 2020 by Farrar, Straus and Giroux.

Essay collections and memoir

Daphne Merkin's non-fiction output includes two collections of essays and a memoir that draw on her characteristic candor, wit, and probing intelligence to examine personal vulnerabilities, cultural obsessions, and psychological depths. Her first essay collection, Dreaming of Hitler: Passions & Provocations, appeared in 1997. The volume gathers provocative pieces addressing taboos and intimate subjects, including the sexual dynamics of spanking and S&M, her loss of religious faith, failed marriage, cosmetic surgery, flirtations with lesbianism, shoplifting, and the hidden strains of family life. A standout title essay confronts the lingering demons of the Holocaust in a self-probing yet outward-engaged manner. Reviewers noted the essays' bracing intelligence, moral reflection, and compulsively readable style, even as some found certain topics dated or overly graphic. Merkin returned to the form with The Fame Lunches: On Wounded Icons, Money, Sex, The Brontës, and the Importance of Handbags in 2014. Named a New York Times Notable Book, the collection offers profiles of complex celebrities such as Marilyn Monroe, Mike Tyson, Courtney Love, and Truman Capote, alongside reflections on writers including Jean Rhys, W. G. Sebald, John Updike, and Alice Munro. Merkin delves beneath surfaces to explore vulnerabilities, the underside of fame, and society's fixation on celebrity, all rendered with empathic observation and cultural acuity. Her memoir This Close to Happy: A Reckoning with Depression was published in 2017 by Farrar, Straus and Giroux. The book recounts Merkin's lifelong experience with clinical depression, from childhood hospitalizations through severe postpartum episodes and later suicidal ideation following her mother's death, while detailing her encounters with therapists, medications, and repeated institutional care. Merkin portrays despair as possessing its own strange luminescence rather than dullness, ultimately framing recovery not as ecstatic happiness but as a state of "relative all-right-ness." The memoir received a cover review in The New York Times Book Review, where Andrew Solomon called it a powerful and perceptive contribution to discussions of depression, offering reassurance through its candid voice.

Notable essays and profiles

Personal life

Recognition and impact

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