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Something Between Us: The Everyday Walls of American Life, and How to Take Them Down New edition [Kõva köide]

  • Formaat: Hardback, 304 pages, kõrgus x laius: 229x152 mm, 10 halftones
  • Ilmumisaeg: 27-May-2025
  • Kirjastus: Stanford University Press
  • ISBN-10: 1503637875
  • ISBN-13: 9781503637870
Teised raamatud teemal:
  • Formaat: Hardback, 304 pages, kõrgus x laius: 229x152 mm, 10 halftones
  • Ilmumisaeg: 27-May-2025
  • Kirjastus: Stanford University Press
  • ISBN-10: 1503637875
  • ISBN-13: 9781503637870
Teised raamatud teemal:
"Whether the plight of refugees or the recent pandemic, the climate crisis or systemic racism, so much turns on the care and concern we can muster for lives and circumstances beyond our own. And yet, the deep divides of national life in the United Stateshave made effective action on such matters a serious and sometimes intractable challenge. Why is it so difficult to acknowledge and address the intertwining of our lives with others? Over the last eight years, anthropologist Anand Pandian has crisscrossed the United States talking with Americans of all kinds to make sense of the ruptures in our physical and psychological social fabric. Insider vs outsider, familiar vs stranger, safety vs threat: these stark distinctions are anchored and sustained by the makeup of so much of contemporary American life, from fortified neighborhoods to bulked-up cars, from visions of the body as an armored fortress, to media that shut out contrary perspectives. This array of interlocking divides make it difficult to take unfamiliar people and perspectives seriously; harder to acknowledge the needs of strangers, to trust their motives and empathize with their struggles. Using the tools of an anthropologist, Pandian interweaves his vivid and challenging encounters with salesmen and truck drivers, police officers and urban planners, and activists for racial and environmental justice with fascinating historical and cultural analysis that challenges us to think beyond the twists and turns of our immediate present. While our impasses draw from deep American histories of segregation and suspicion, Pandian shows us how the work of mutual aid and communal caretaking can help us surface more radical visions for a life in common with others across the rigid lines we take so easily forgranted, and learn anew how to meet strangers in this land as potential kin"--

An anthropologist's quest to understand the deep social and political divides in American society, and the everyday strategies that can overcome them.

In 2016, Anand Pandian was alarmed by Donald Trump's harsh attacks on immigrants to the United States, the appeal of that politics of anger and fear. In the years that followed, he crisscrossed the country—from Fargo, North Dakota to Denton, Texas, from southern California to upstate New York—seeking out fellow Americans with markedly different social and political commitments, trying to understand the forces that have hardened our suspicions of others. The result is Something Between Us: The Everyday Walls of American Life, and How to Take Them Down, a groundbreaking and ultimately hopeful exploration of the ruptures in our social fabric, and courageous efforts to rebuild a collective life beyond them.

The stakes of disconnection have never been higher. From the plight of migrants and refugees to the climate crisis and the recent pandemic, so much turns on the care and concern we can muster for lives and circumstances beyond our own. But as Pandian discovers, such empathy is often thwarted by the infrastructure of everyday American life: fortified homes and neighborhoods, bulked-up cars and trucks, visions of the body as an armored fortress, and media that shut out contrary views. Home and road, body and mind: these interlocking walls sharpen the divide between insiders and outsiders, making it difficult to take unfamiliar people and perspectives seriously, to acknowledge the needs of others and relate to their struggles.

Through vivid encounters with Americans of many kinds—including salesmen, truck drivers, police officers, urban planners, and activists for women's rights and environmental justice—Pandian shares tools to think beyond the twists and turns of our bracing present. While our impasses draw from deep American histories of isolation and segregation, he reveals how strategies of mutual aid and communal caretaking can help to surface more radical visions for a life in common with others, ways of meeting strangers in this land as potential kin.

Arvustused

"A beautifully written antidoteto help us examine and overcome the many real and imagined walls in America that only seem to foster anger, ignorance, and the misunderstandings that prevent us from seeing our shared humanity. Pandian writes about a country in turmoil with grace and kindness using insight that can only come from a keen ethnographic eye." Jason De León, author of Soldiers and Kings: Survival and Hope in the World of Human Smuggling, winner of the National Book Award "Applying his 'anthropology of the open mind' to the concrete ways we separate ourselves from each other, Pandian explores how our collective material culture generates and sustains social, political, and ontological division. This is a remarkable book, notable for its tough questions, even-handed rigor, and indefatigable compassion. It offers a piercing, necessary, and humane look deep into contemporary American culture." Roy Scranton, author of Learning to Die in the Anthropocene: Reflections on the End of a Civilization "A brilliant and vivid application of cultural theory, ethnography, and material culture that helps us see our world in a new way. It shows how and why we choose to segregate ourselves from those who challenge or discomfort us by using barriers that are cultural, legal, and physical. It explains the current United States better than almost any book I have read in the past decade." Siva Vaidhyanathan, author of Antisocial Media: How Facebook Disconnects Us and Undermines Democracy "Something Between Us provides a beautifully rendered account of the walls, made of either mortar or mistrust, that shape our lives. In a moment of deep divisiveness in America, it offers an urgently needed account of how we might reimagine our communities in ways that anchor us to each other and our own humanity." Hahrie Han, author of Undivided: The Quest for Racial Solidarity in an American Church and co-author of Prisms of the People: Power & Organizing in Twenty-First-Century America "A piercing account of the fortress mindset that has gripped American culture, hardening not only our politics but also our homes, roads, bodies, and minds. Pandian pulls off the great anthropological trick of making the familiar seem strange and disturbing. An important book." Eric Klinenberg, author of Palaces for the People: How Social Infrastructure Can Help Fight Inequality, Polarization, and the Decline of Civic Life and 2020: One City, Seven People, and the Year Everything Changed "A brave book tackling some of our most contentious political issues through, at times, harrowing fieldwork. It accomplishes the rare feat of balancing the intellectual acuity of ethnographic study with the wit and urgency of journalism. I was left both unnerved and inspired to action." Bradley Garrett, author of Bunker: What It Takes to Survive the Apocalypse "In Something Between Us, Anand Pandian offers a profound interrogation of the wallsliteral and figurativethat divide American life. Through sharp and considerate ethnography, Pandian reveals the insidious ways fear and exclusion shape the divisions of our daily interactions. This essential work invites readers to dismantle these barriers, envisioning new structures for humanity built on mutuality, openness, and repair." Jovan Scott Lewis, author of Violent Utopia: Dispossession and Black Restoration in Tulsa "This is not a book, to start with, but an experience. I would rank it as some of the best writing by just about anyone lately about the ways our environments, our infrastructure, and our politics keep us divided, topics that are not easy to write about well or at all. I am glad he did that work; he created something truly wonderful as a result." Joshua Reno, co-author of Imagining the Heartland: White Supremacy and the American Midwest "Something Between Us is a profound and fascinating exploration of the fortresses we've built around ourselves in Americain our communities and in our mindsand a rousing call to a more hopeful vision of collective life." EliPariser, author of The Filter Bubble: What the Internet Is Hiding from You

Introduction: Building Walls
I. Space to Shelter
1. Fortress Homes: Treasure Coast, Florida
2. Neighbors and Others: Fargo, North Dakota
3. Place and Belonging: Denton, Texas II. Life on the Road
II. Life on the Road
4. It's a Brick: Los Angeles, California
5. Rolling Coal: Midwest and Beyond
6. Walking Barefoot: Florida Panhandle III. The Vulnerable Body
III. The Vulnerable Body
7. White Body Armor: Shelbyville, Tennessee
8. Skin of the Country: Augusta, Georgia
9. Living with Exposure: The Hudson River Valley IV. Walls of the Mind
IV. Walls of the Mind
10. Masked Realities: Southern Michigan
11. Turning Right and Left: Southern California
12. Shedding Walls: Columbus, Ohio
Conclusion: Life Between the Lines: Baltimore, Maryland
Anand Pandian is a professor of anthropology at Johns Hopkins University. His books include A Possible Anthropology: Methods for Uneasy Times (2019) and Ayya's Accounts: A Ledger of Hope in Modern India (2014). He has served as President of the Society for Cultural Anthropology, and as a curator of the Ecological Design Collective. He lives with his family in Baltimore, Maryland.