Harriet Brown is an American writer, magazine editor, and professor of magazine journalism at the S.I. Newhouse School of Public Communications at Syracuse University.
Career
She began her magazine career in 1979, with a stint at
Popular Science magazine. She was part of the start-up staff for both
Wigwag magazine,
1989–1991, and
American Girl magazine American Girl, 1992–2000. Her 2006
New York Times article "One Spoonful at a Time"
chronicled the descent of her daughter, whom she does not want publicly named, into anorexia and recovery via family-based treatment, also known as the Maudsley approach. That article became the basis of her 2010 book,
Brave Girl Eating. Her experiences inspired Brown to begin working as an advocate for better eating disorders treatment. That same year she helped found
Maudsley Parents, a website offering resources to families struggling with anorexia.
As a professor at Newhouse, Brown continues to write, research, and teach about eating disorders and body image as well as other issues, including family estrangement. She writes for The New York Times science section and magazine, MIT Technology Review, , Undark magazine, and many other publications. In 2011 she won the John F. Murray Prize in Strategic Communication for the Public Good, awarded by the University of Iowa School of Journalism. She currently lives in Syracuse, NY.
Bibliography
Writer
Editor
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Mr. Wrong: Real-Life Stories About the Men We Used to Love (Ballantine Books), 2007
-
Feed Me!: Writers Dish About Food, Eating, Body Image, and Weight (Ballantine, 2009)
External links