ABSTRACT

As spring and summer vacations beckon, this book invites and incites a whole new approach to travel. "Postmarks from a Political Traveler" is a series of travel recollections confronting the troubling topics of roots and racism, polar bears and climate change, anti-Americanism, and the war in Afghanistan. The book opens with the story of the author s experience growing up in the Jim Crow South, traveling in apartheid South Africa, and living in the post-apartheid South Africa of 2009 and 2010. It explores the not-so-dissimilar roots and racism of the United States and South Africa, as well as the cross-fertilization of ideas between the two countries. The next installment chronicles two trips to Churchill, Manitoba, where the planet s largest population of polar bears congregate each October. It recounts the dramatic changes that have occurred in both the human and the polar bear communities in just the last decade and shows how the bears have become an Arctic version of the proverbial canary in the coalmine. Then the book shifts to the author s journey back to the United States on a German freighter with a rabidly anti-American captain. Woven into this account of life aboard a long haul ship are threads of the author s travels and anti-American encounters over a decade of living in Africa and Asia. The book concludes with reflections on trips to Afghanistan in 2004 and in 2012, describing the effects of war and conflict zone politics on women, education, refugees, and aid workers. What ties these episodes together is the author s commitment to social justice and to changing the world through travel and writing that is, affirming travel as a political act."

chapter |4 pages

Introduction

Travel as a Political Act

part I|49 pages

Down at the Blue Lagoon

chapter 1|9 pages

Two Minds, Two Worlds, One Country

chapter 2|11 pages

Lest We Forget

chapter 3|6 pages

Go Hunting Where the Ducks Are

part II|33 pages

Polar Bears

chapter 6|12 pages

The Hudson Bay Train to Churchill

chapter 7|9 pages

A Blue-Ribbon Day and a Blue Moon

chapter 8|11 pages

Canaries in the Coal Mine

part III|72 pages

An Anti-American Age

chapter 9|4 pages

Beauty Is As Beauty Does

chapter 10|8 pages

Pirates at Sea

chapter 11|6 pages

Tiger Cages and Torture

chapter 12|7 pages

We Believe; Therefore It Must Be True

chapter 13|16 pages

Mooning the Russian Army

chapter 14|22 pages

Bush, Brickbats, and Bouquets in the Koreas

chapter 15|8 pages

Welcome Home, Man

part IV|67 pages

Return to Kabul

chapter 16|14 pages

Testing Our Resolve

chapter 17|23 pages

An Improvised Excursion through Kabul

chapter 18|23 pages

Fortress America and an Army of Aid Workers

chapter 19|6 pages

Let Me Die in My Footsteps