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The Edge of the Plain
- How Borders Make and Break Our World
- Narrated by: James Crawford
- Length: 13 hrs and 39 mins
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Publisher's Summary
Today, there are more borders in the world than ever before in human history. In this book James Crawford argues that our enduring obsession with borders has brought us to a crisis point: that we are entering the endgame of a process that began thousands of years ago, when we first started dividing up the earth.
Beginning with the earliest known marker which denoted the end of one land and the beginning of the next, James follows the story of borders into our fragile and uncertain future - towards the virtual frontiers of the internet, and the shifting geography of a world beset by climate change. In the process, he travels to many borders old and new: from a melting border high in the glacial landscapes of the Austrian-Italian Alps to the only place on land where Europe and Africa meet; from the artist Banksy's 'Walled Off Hotel' in the conflict-torn West Bank to the Sonoran Desert and the fault lines of the US/Mexico border..
Combining history, travel and reportage, The Edge of the Plain explores how borders have grown and evolved to take control of our landscapes, our memories, our identities and our destinies. As nationalism, climate change, globalisation, technology and mass migration all collide with ever-hardening borders, something has to give. Can we let go of the lines that separate us? Or are we fated to repeat the mistakes of the past, as our angry, warming and segregated planet lurches towards catastrophe?
Critic Reviews
What listeners say about The Edge of the Plain
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- Anonymous User
- 22-04-2024
Informative knowledge of earth & it’s peoples
Loved the facts, the information & statistics. How it was presented and the breadth of knowledge.
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- Lector
- 23-02-2023
Very good, apart from mispronunciations
A thoughtful, prescient and interesting examination of the effect of borders on human beings. Highly recommended. My one quibble concerns the jarring mispronunciations, especially of proper nouns (Caucasus is not pronounced Cor-CASS-us). This is a problem with other oral narrators. Narrators should skim each chapter beforehand, looking up words they are unsure of.
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