How Do We Face Loss With Dignity?
In his latest work, “The Last White Man,” the award-winning writer Mohsin Hamid imagines a world that is very like our own, with one major exception: On various days, white people wake up to discover that their skin is no longer white. It’s a heavy premise, but one of Hamid’s unique talents as a novelist is his ability to take on the most difficult of topics — racism, migration, loss — with a remarkably light touch.
“How do you begin to have these conversations in a way that allows everybody a way in?” Hamid asks at one point in our conversation. “How do you talk about these things in a way that’s open to everyone?” What sets Hamid apart is his capacity to do just that — both in his fiction and in our conversation. We discuss:
How Hamid experienced what it was like to lose his whiteness after 9/11
What happens to a society when suddenly we can’t sort ourselves by race
The origins of modern humans’ fear of death — and how to overcome it
Why Hamid thinks future humans will look back at the idea of borders with moral horror
Why Hamid believes that pessimistic realism is a “deeply conservative” worldview
Hamid’s process for imagining optimistic futures
Why Hamid believes that the very notion of the self is a fiction
Why we turn to activities like sex, drugs and meditation when we get overwhelmed
How America’s policies toward immigrants and refugees should challenge our “heroic” sense of national identity
What Toni Morrison taught Hamid about how to read and write
And more.