Margaret Atwood compares UBC probe of Steven Galloway to Salem witch trials
VANCOUVER — Margaret Atwood says the University of British Columbia’s investigation of fellow author Steven Galloway was flawed and failed both sides, comparing it to the Salem witchcraft trials.
Galloway was fired from his position as creative writing chairman in June after a months-long probe into what the university would only describe as “serious allegations.”
Atwood, who has won the prestigious Man Booker Prize, faced a social media backlash this week after she joined dozens of prominent authors in signing an open letter calling for an independent inquiry into the university’s handling of the case.
She defended her decision on Thursday, writing in an emailed statement that the model of the witchcraft trials, which took place in colonial Massachusetts in the late 1600s, is not a good one.


