Furthermore: Where the Headlines Take You
Unspoken Rules in Uncertain Times
With the eyes of the world on the U.S. due to our recent historic election I find myself reflecting on how the world sees us as a country. Sometimes an outsider's perspective can reveal a lot about the ways that we choose to live our lives. Here are a few titles that examine the often unspoken rules (some unbending, others surprisingly flexible) that govern our cultural and physical landscape.
Local publisher Graphic Arts Books is partly responsible for the prolific Culture Shock! series. Titles cover countries from all over the world but you'd have to read Culture Shock!- USA to find out that, "Americans can form relationships very quickly, but they don't often go deep. We constantly encounter new people we will never see again. Therefore we don't need to worry that our familiarity will entice them to become burdens to us." Author Esther Wanning provides useful insights into generalized American society as well as tips for those adjusting to life in the U.S. that might equally provide an opportunity for introspection for people already steeped in our culture. She even includes a quiz and a list of DOs and DON'Ts which are particularly useful: DO Arrive 10-15 late for a dinner party! DON'T try to bribe police or other officials!
Portland author Chuck Thompson's Smile While You're Lying: Confessions of a Rogue Travel Writer is part expose and part thriller. Thompson may have burned some bridges in writing this book but what he reveals about the inner machinations of the travel writing industry will make you think twice about the effects of globalization the world and on the casual traveler and how those experiences differ from what is depicted in our travel magazines. The stories that appear here are more gritty, visceral and sincere than anything he could have gotten published as a travel writer. They detail experiences of a human scale. These are stories of one man making sense of the constraints of his chosen profession and the world at large simultaneously. Humorous and touching, Thompson's writing says much about an important way that we take in information about the world around us and about what we might find if are willing to challenge ourselves to experience travel on a more intimate level.
Few would argue with the idea that these are uncertain times. With so much public dialog focused on politics and culture I sometimes turn to science as a source of assurance. Brian Greene's The Elegant Universe: Superstrings, Hidden Dimensions, and the Quest for the Ultimate Theory is great popular science writing because it takes very recent, very challenging scientific developments and presents them in an easy to understand, entertaining fashion. I'll admit that there is some irony in recommending this book as a source of certainty in uncertain times since the discoveries described within it build on theories that embrace chaos, unpredictability and concepts of physics which feel quite surreal when compared to our everyday life. However, Greene's descriptions of reality at its most essential, profoundly minute level fill me with a sense of awe and possibility that is invigorating. Truly, these are the rules we live by. Nova produced a two DVD set that serves as a fun companion piece.
Posted by Matthew
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