Victoria Loustalot Author, editor, & communications consultant Victoria Loustalot is an author and editor with twenty years of journalism, publishing, and digital media experience. She has been a founding member and senior manager of groundbreaking teams at Twitter, Condé Nast, and NBC. In addition, Victoria has taught seminars and undergraduate writing classes at Columbia University, the University of Arizona, and the University of Montana. She is also an editor and ghost writer, with particular expertise in memoir, fiction, sociology, philosophy, and psychology manuscripts. Her essays and articles have been published in the New York Times, Publishers Weekly, the Onion, the New Yorker’s website, and many other print and online publications. Her writing has also been acquired by the Metropolitan Museum of Art’s Thomas J. Watson Library as well as Yale University’s Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library. She earned her BA and her MFA from Columbia University in New York City and is the author of three nonfiction books (This is How You Say Goodbye: A Daughter’s Memoir (2013), Living Like Audrey (2017), & Future Perfect (2019)) that have been published in both America and abroad. Participant In: The Technē of Memory March 18th, 2023 at 2:30pm EST Past Event Watch the video » What is memory? How does it determine our experience and identity? To what extent does memory influence our understanding of the future? Or of time itself? How do individual memories differ from collective ones? What happens to our sense of belonging and selfhood when our memories are externalized in digital devices? Throughout the history of… read more »
The Technē of Memory March 18th, 2023 at 2:30pm EST Past Event Watch the video » What is memory? How does it determine our experience and identity? To what extent does memory influence our understanding of the future? Or of time itself? How do individual memories differ from collective ones? What happens to our sense of belonging and selfhood when our memories are externalized in digital devices? Throughout the history of… read more »