New Books Network

Anand Pandian, "Something Between Us: The Everyday Walls of American Life, and How to Take Them Down" (Stanford UP, 2025)

17 snips
Aug 3, 2025
Anand Pandian, a Krieger-Eisenhower Professor of Anthropology at Johns Hopkins University and author, explores the walls dividing American society in his new book. He shares insights from his ethnographic road trips across the U.S., tackling issues of identity, community, and the isolation caused by modern living. Pandian discusses the impact of physical and social barriers, advocates for rekindling community ties, and emphasizes the transformative power of curiosity in bridging divides. His findings highlight the urgent need for empathy in today's fractured landscape.
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ANECDOTE

Personal Roots Of The Project

  • Pandian describes his immigrant family background and how 2016 xenophobic discourse unsettled his sense of belonging.
  • That unease motivated his cross-country research into American divisions.
INSIGHT

Everyday Walls Harden Empathy

  • American everyday walls have become more impermeable, shaping how people treat outsiders.
  • Less porous borders between inside and outside reduce empathy and make collective care harder.
INSIGHT

Design Shapes Social Feeling

  • Material design choices (houses, fences, security tech) structure social feelings, not just physical safety.
  • These designs hollow out everyday possibilities for interaction and deepen suspicion of strangers.
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