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  1. William Shawn (né Chon; August 31, 1907 – December 8, 1992) was an American magazine editor who edited The New Yorker from 1952 until 1987.

  2. Periodista y editor. Distinciones. Premio George Polk (1988) [ editar datos en Wikidata] William Shawn (nacido como Chon) ( Chicago, 31 de agosto de 1907 - Nueva York, 8 de diciembre de 1992) fue un editor de revistas estadounidense que editó The New Yorker entre 1952 y 1987.

  3. William Shawn (born Aug. 31, 1907, Chicago, Ill., U.S.—died Dec. 8, 1992, New York, N.Y.) was an American editor who headed The New Yorker (1952–87), shaping it into one of the most influential periodicals in the United States.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  4. 20 de dic. de 1992 · It may be that William Shawn carried anonymity one veil too far, but what appeared to be an endearing eccentricity in the modern workaday world was an invaluable tool in the world of...

  5. periodista estadounidense / De Wikipedia, la enciclopedia encyclopedia. William Shawn (nacido como Chon) ( Chicago, 31 de agosto de 1907 - Nueva York, 8 de diciembre de 1992) fue un editor de revistas estadounidense que editó The New Yorker entre 1952 y 1987.

  6. 9 de dic. de 1992 · William Shawn, the shy, strong-willed editor who ran The New Yorker for a third of this century, died yesterday morning at the apartment on the Upper East Side of Manhattan where he had lived...

  7. 5 de jul. de 2016 · Decorum was important to Shawn, even though the world was changing. Rachel MacKenzie, a fiction editor, rejected Philip Roth’s 40,000-word novella “Goodbye, Columbus” less because of its length—the magazine had just run J. D. Salinger’s 50,000-word “Zooey”—but, rather, because, as MacKenzie wrote, “taste would rule out here much of what is essential to the narrative.”