Listen Now | Sarah Kendzior’s new book is The Last American Road Trip, a chronicle of trips that she and her family have made across the vast U.S. beginning in 2016 and continuing through 2024. It’s an examination of American identity, the changes that the last decade have brought to our soil, how Americans retell our history, and how 2020 became the clarifying dividing line of our modern era.The book travels to towns along the Mississippi River, to the Ozarks, Route 66, the desert Southwest, underground caves, outlaw hideouts, and countless National Parks, all with the goal of taking an honest look at where we are as a nation.Sarah last joined this podcast in August, 2020, while still quarantined at home to avoid the pandemic. Despite the threats from COVID though, the summer of 2020 was also a time of great promise, where Americans turned out in vast numbers to protest racial injustice after the police murder of George Floyd.This conversation also touches on the role technology has played in isolating and dividing us and how crafting and working with our hands can be a form of resistance.
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136. Sarah Kendzior's Last American Road Trip
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Listen Now | Sarah Kendzior’s new book is The Last American Road Trip, a chronicle of trips that she and her family have made across the vast U.S. beginning in 2016 and continuing through 2024. It’s an examination of American identity, the changes that the last decade have brought to our soil, how Americans retell our history, and how 2020 became the clarifying dividing line of our modern era.The book travels to towns along the Mississippi River, to the Ozarks, Route 66, the desert Southwest, underground caves, outlaw hideouts, and countless National Parks, all with the goal of taking an honest look at where we are as a nation.Sarah last joined this podcast in August, 2020, while still quarantined at home to avoid the pandemic. Despite the threats from COVID though, the summer of 2020 was also a time of great promise, where Americans turned out in vast numbers to protest racial injustice after the police murder of George Floyd.This conversation also touches on the role technology has played in isolating and dividing us and how crafting and working with our hands can be a form of resistance.