Nisha Rathode (Editor)

Joris Luyendijk

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Nationality
  
Dutch

Role
  
Author

Years active
  
1998–present

Website
  
www.jorisluyendijk.nl

Name
  
Joris Luyendijk


Joris Luyendijk httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommons11

Born
  
30 December 1971 (age 52) (
1971-12-30
)
Amsterdam, Netherlands

Alma mater
  
University of Amsterdam

Occupation
  
Author, journalist, talk show host

Books
  
Dit kan niet waar zijn: onder ba, People Like Us: Misrepres, Hello Everybody!: One Jour, Hello Everybody

Similar People
  
Renske de Greef, Adriaan van Dis, Jelle Brandt Corstius, Griet Op de Beeck

Profiles


TV shows
  
Wintergasten, Zomergasten

Education
  
University of Amsterdam

Joris luyendijk a bank itself is a blueprint for short termism


Joris Luyendijk ( [ˈjoːrɪs ˈlœyə(n)ˌdɛik]; born 30 December 1971) is a Dutch non-fiction author, news correspondent, and talk show host.

Contents

Tedxamsterdam 2011 joris luyendijk


Biography

Joris Luyendijk was born on 30 December 1971 in Amsterdam in the Netherlands. He lived in Hilversum from the age of five. Luyendijk studied in Kansas, Amsterdam, and Cairo. He earned his Master's degree equivalent "doctoraal" degree in Cairo. His first book Een goede man slaat soms zijn vrouw (1998, A Good Man Sometimes Beats His Wife) is about the Egyptian society from a Western observer's point of view.

He eventually became a news correspondent for various Netherlands-based media organisations in the Middle East for a number of years. He was based in Egypt, Lebanon, and the Palestinian territories. He also reported on the Second Gulf War in Iraq. His book Het zijn net mensen (2006, They're just like people) is a report of his experiences as a news correspondent in the Middle East, and quickly became a bestseller in the Netherlands. The book has since been translated and published in Denmark, Germany, Hungary, Italy, Australia, the US, France and Slovenia. The title in English is Fit to Print (Australia), Hello, Everybody! (UK) or People Like Us (US).

In People Like Us, Luyendijk tells the story of his five years as a correspondent in the Middle East. He chronicles first-hand experiences of dictatorship, occupation, terror, and war. His stories cast light on a number of major crises, from the Iraq War to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, along with less-reported issues such as underage orphan trash-collectors in Cairo. The more he witnessed, the less he understood, and he became increasingly aware of the yawning gap between what he saw on the ground and what was later reported in the media.

From 2006, Joris Luyendijk was living in Amsterdam. In the summer of 2006 and 2007 he carried out interviews for the talk show Zomergasten (Summer Guests) on VPRO. From January 2010, he held the Leonardo Chair at the University of Tilburg, and taught the masterclass “Journalism for the 21st Century”. Luyendijk studied Arabic in Amsterdam and Cairo.

In September 2010 Joris Luyendijk was asked to shadow the Dutch Parliament and government in The Hague for a month, resulting in a book on Dutch politics, titled Je hebt het niet van mij, maar... ("You didn't hear it from me, but..."). From 2011 Luyendijk was based in London where he worked for The Guardian. In "The Joris Luyendijk Banking Blog" he provided an anthropological perspective on the financial world. In Dutch-language newspapers NRC Handelsblad and De Standaard Luyendijk commented weekly on his life in the City. His book about the City Swimming with Sharks has appeared in over fifteen countries and was the best-selling book of 2015 in the Netherlands.

References

Joris Luyendijk Wikipedia


Similar Topics