What We Are Reading Today: In the Mouth of the Wolf by Katherine Corcoran

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Updated 16 October 2022
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What We Are Reading Today: In the Mouth of the Wolf by Katherine Corcoran

In her book “In the Mouth of the Wolf,” Katherine Corcoran investigates the murder of a fellow reporter in Mexico.

Corcoran offers a “chilling and nuanced look at press freedom in a country persistently rated among the most dangerous in the world for journalists,” Mark Bowden said in a review for The New York Times.

Regina Martínez was beaten and strangled in her home in Xalapa in April 2012. She was a fiercely independent woman, 48 years old, who had exposed human rights abuses and corruption in her home state of Veracruz for decades.

Corcoran, who was then the Mexico and Central America bureau chief for The Associated Press, had never met Martínez apart from one phone conversation, but she felt a deep connection.

Both women had begun their careers in the 1980s, inspired by the role of journalists in exposing government betrayal and failure.

For Corcoran, the work had led to ever more exciting and lucrative opportunities. She was managing a team investigating extrajudicial killings by the Mexican Army.

Her work was important and exciting, and with her AP credentials and American citizenship, plus vacations home, she could pursue it in relative safety and comfort.


What We Are Reading Today: Shame: The Politics and Power of an Emotion

Updated 23 December 2025
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What We Are Reading Today: Shame: The Politics and Power of an Emotion

Author: David Keen

Today, we are caught in a shame spiral—a vortex of mutual shaming that pervades everything from politics to social media. We are shamed for our looks, our culture, our ethnicity, our sexuality, our poverty, our wrongdoings, our politics. But what is the point of all this shaming and countershaming? Does it work? And if so, for whom?

In Shame, David Keen explores the function of modern shaming, paying particular attention to how shame is instrumentalized and weaponized. Keen points out that there is usually someone who offers an escape from shame—and that many of those who make this offer have been piling on shame in the first place. Self-interested manipulations of shame, Keen argues, are central to understanding phenomena as wide-ranging as consumerism, violent crime, populist politics, and even war and genocide. Shame is political as well as personal. To break out of our current cycle of shame and shaming, and to understand the harm that shame can do, we must recognize the ways that shame is being made to serve political and economic purposes.

Keen also traces the rise of leaders on both sides of the Atlantic who possess a dangerous shamelessness, and he asks how shame and shamelessness can both be damaging.