Something Between Us
The Everyday Walls of American Life, and How to Take Them Down
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- $27.99
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- $27.99
Publisher Description
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.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
In this striking account, anthropologist Pandian (Anthropocene Unseen) travels the U.S. seeking to understand America's growing racial and political divide. Through immersive encounters and ethnographic observations, he hopes to find "a life in common" with his fellow countrymen, but instead finds a "hardening of American life" via the literal and metaphorical walling-off of homes, vehicles, bodies, and minds. The major component of this walled-off life is the calcifying of "American views about others," a fact he stumbles upon again and again—at a gated community in Florida where the director of security talks to him about residents' "paranoia," or a builder's expo where attendees are focused on making the homes of the rich into "refuges from the danger and insecurity of the world." Throughout, Pandian gets into numerous gut-churning conversations (he demurely calls them "vivid and challenging"), including one where a white supremacist speculates about what would happen to Asian Americans like the author in an imagined new ethnostate. Yet Pandian is firm that there is, in the words of James Baldwin, "something between" him and his subjects, and that nurturing the connection is still possible (as Baldwin put it: "These are my countrymen and I do care about them and even if I didn't, there is something between us"). It's a solemn and extraordinary glimpse of a splintering America.