Quillette was founded in October 2015 in
Sydney, Australia, by Claire Lehmann. It is named after the French word "
quillette", a
withy cutting planted so that it takes root—used here as a metaphor for an essay. Lehmann stated that
Quillette was created with the aim of "setting up a space where we could critique the blank slate orthodoxy"—a theory of human development which assumes individuals are largely products of
nurture, not nature—but that it "naturally evolved into a place where people critique other aspects of what they see as
left-wing orthodoxy". In August 2017,
Quillette published an article in which five academics expressed support for James Damore, author of the
memo "
Google's Ideological Echo Chamber". According to
Politico,
Quillette website crashed because of the popularity of the article. Lehmann was told by her tech staff that the cause may have been a
DDoS attack. In its profile of
Quillette,
Politico reported that Lehmann knew about the
grievance studies affair before it was first reported in October 2018. In response,
Quillette again published comments from five like-minded academics. In May 2019,
Quillette published an article alleging connections between
antifa activists and national-level reporters who cover the
far-right, based on the accounts these reporters followed on Twitter. In August 2019,
Quillette published a hoax article titled "DSA Is Doomed" submitted by an anonymous writer claiming to be a construction worker named Archie Carter who was critical of the organisation
Democratic Socialists of America. The magazine retracted the article after the hoax was brought to its attention. According to the socialist magazine
Jacobin, the hoax brought
Quillette fact-checking and editorial standards into question.
Quillette has published articles supporting the pseudoscientific
human biodiversity movement (HBD), by writers such as
Brian Boutwell and
John Paul Wright, HBD being a euphemism for
eugenics and
scientific racism.
Quillette published articles supporting
Noah Carl who "was excluded from a Cambridge University fellowship over his alleged links to far-right organisations, including collaborating in writing projects with far-right activist
Emil Kirkegaard, and for engaging in unethical and dishonest research supporting eugenicist views". == Reception ==