Notes on a Foreign Country: An American Abroad in a Post-American World

Notes on a Foreign Country: An American Abroad in a Post-American World

by Suzy Hansen

Narrated by Kirsten Potter

Unabridged — 10 hours, 25 minutes

Notes on a Foreign Country: An American Abroad in a Post-American World

Notes on a Foreign Country: An American Abroad in a Post-American World

by Suzy Hansen

Narrated by Kirsten Potter

Unabridged — 10 hours, 25 minutes

Audiobook (Digital)

$23.49
FREE With a B&N Audiobooks Subscription | Cancel Anytime
$0.00

Free with a B&N Audiobooks Subscription | Cancel Anytime

$24.99 Save 6% Current price is $23.49, Original price is $24.99. You Save 6%.
START FREE TRIAL

Already Subscribed? 

Sign in to Your BN.com Account


Listen on the free Barnes & Noble NOOK app


Related collections and offers

FREE

with a B&N Audiobooks Subscription

Or Pay $23.49 $24.99

Overview

In the wake of the September 11 attacks and the U.S.-led invasion of Iraq, Suzy Hansen, who grew up in an insular conservative town in New Jersey, was enjoying early success as a journalist for a high-profile New York newspaper. Increasingly, though, the disconnect between the chaos of world events and the response at home took on pressing urgency for her. Seeking to understand the Muslim world that had been reduced to scaremongering headlines, she moved to Istanbul.



Hansen arrived in Istanbul with romantic ideas about a mythical city perched between East and West, and with a naïve sense of the Islamic world beyond. Over the course of her many years of living in Turkey and traveling in Greece, Egypt, Afghanistan, and Iran, she learned a great deal about these countries and their cultures and histories and politics. But the greatest, most unsettling surprise would be what she learned about her own country-and herself, an American abroad in the era of American decline. It would take leaving her home to discover what she came to think of as the two Americas: the country and its people, and the experience of American power around the world.

Editorial Reviews

The New York Times Book Review - Hisham Matar

…a deeply honest and brave portrait of an individual sensibility reckoning with her country's violent role in the world…Hansen is not only unnerved by but also genuinely interested in the ways her country fails to "interrogate" itself. She asks why, given the extent to which America has shaped the modern Middle East…it "did not feel or care to explore what that influence meant." She is unsettled by how absent or illusive or, worse, unnecessary this fact is to many Americans, including herself—for, before anything else, Notes on a Foreign Country is a sincere and intelligent act of self-questioning. It is a political and personal memoir that negotiates that vertiginous distance that exists between what America is and what it thinks of itself…The tone is at once adamant and intimate. This is a book that is spoken softly rather than screamed; and one senses that it took great personal discipline to be so. In fact, what is admirable is the extent to which Hansen implicates herself. She does this soberly and without self-pity. She is, to herself, independent but by no means innocent.

Publishers Weekly

★ 05/08/2017
After moving to Turkey in 2007, American journalist Hansen, who writes for the New York Times Magazine, came to the startling realization that America seen from abroad is a wholly different entity from the America she knew. Hansen explores her own loss of innocence, as her belief in American grandiosity, exceptionalism, and humanitarianism is deeply shaken by the destruction wrought by the U.S. in the Middle East. The first chapters describe Hansen’s encounters with Turkish nationalism and her painful acquaintance with a new view of her country’s history. Subsequent chapters explore the ways American interventions have spread wars, propped up dictators, destroyed landscapes in the name of modernization, and spurred the rise of Islamic fundamentalism throughout the Middle and Near East. Lucid, reflective, probing, and poetic, Hansen’s book is also a searing critique of the ugly depths of American ignorance, made more dangerous because the declining U.S. imperial system coincides with decay at home. The book is a revelatory indictment of American policy both domestic and foreign, made gripping by Hansen’s confident—if overreaching—distillation of complicated historical processes and her detailed, evocative descriptions of places, people, and experiences most American audiences can’t imagine. (Aug.)

From the Publisher

"Deeply honest and brave . . . A sincere and intelligent act of self-questioning . . . Hansen is doing something both rare and necessary." —Hisham Matar, The New York Times Book Review (cover)

"A piercingly honest critique of the unexamined white American life." —The New Yorker

"Informed by deep reading in the history of U.S. foreign policy . . . At a time when our wrenching politics have turned our gaze on ourselves, [Hansen's] book is a necessary tonic." —Christian Lorentzen, New York Magazine

"Searching and searing . . . [Suzy Hansen] combines a brisk history of America’s anguished intervention in the region; artful reporting on how citizens in Turkey and its neighbors view the United States today; and unsparing self-reflection to explain how she, an Ivy League-educated journalist, could be so ignorant of the extent of her country’s role in remaking the post-World War II world . . . Notes on a Foreign Country is a testament to one journalist’s courage in digging deep within herself to understand the real story and to make sure she gets it right." —Barbara Spindel, The Christian Science Monitor

"[Hansen] asks probing and difficult questions that left me ruminating about their significance in our current political climate . . . An insightful read for any American who is, has been, or will be living abroad . . . Hansen’s book serves as a call to serious reflection and action for white Americans, even, and perhaps especially, the liberal, well traveled, and well intentioned." —Rebecca Barr, Los Angeles Review of Books

"Compelling . . . [Hansen] vividly captures the disorientation we experience when our preconceived notions collide with uncomfortable discoveries . . . Rare and refreshing . . . Hansen's principal injunction to Americans to understand how others view them and their country's policies is timely and urgent." —Ali Wyne, The Washington Post

"Hansen turns a coming-of-age travelogue into a geopolitical memoir of sorts, without sacrificing personal urgency in the process . . . Her long stay in Istanbul (she’s still there) gives her an outsider’s vantage on myopic American arrogance that is bracing. And her fascinating insider’s view of Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s rise upends Western simplicities . . . The experience is contagious." —Ann Hulbert, The Atlantic

"A kind of absolution and redemption for one thoughtful and sensitive US citizen . . . conducted by an insightful writer with remarkable powers of observation." —Kaya Genç, The New York Review of Books

"A fluid amalgam of memoir, journalism and political critique — and a very readable challenge to American exceptionalism." —Alice Troy-Donovan, The Financial Times

"Extraordinary . . . This is a beautiful, angry, sad piece of writing that every American should read as we try to live in a world that has long known things about us that we are only now coming to understand." —Ruth Conniff, The Progressive

"Ardent, often lovely . . . If Noam Chomsky could write like this, Hansen's work would already be done." —Karl Vick, TIME

"It would be difficult for an American reader not to feel changed by this book. By framing the history of American imperialism within her own journey from innocence to knowledge, Hansen serves as a guide to whom we all can easily relate." —Andrew Wessels, Los Angeles Review of Books

"Hansen’s sustained self-criticism indicts the white American system itself and, in the process, does the field of journalism a great service with her humility, introspection, and willingness to defy the establishment line." —Belén Fernández, Jacobin

"Crucial and powerful . . . A keen and penetrating meditation on the decline of the United States . . . Downright prophetic." —Ryne Clos, Spectrum Culture

"Sobering yet hopeful . . . Written with compassion and a deep thirst for justice, this book is a must for anyone struggling to make sense of the rapidly changing times we live in." —Jeannine M. Pitas, America

"Eloquent and impassioned . . . Hansen leaves us with the fervent hope that Americans can reconnect us to the rest of humanity." —Tom Zelman, Minneapolis Star-Tribune

"Fascinating . . . Hansen artfully conveys her own initial lack of awareness of the world, and her realization that she had internalized American exceptionalism into her own identity." —The National Book Review

“Hansen’s must-read book makes the argument that Americans, specifically white Americans, are decades overdue in examining and accepting their country’s imperial identity . . . Hansen builds her winning argument by combining personal examination and observation with geopolitical history lessons. She is a fearless patriot, and this is a book for the brave.” —Emily Dziuban, Booklist (starred review)

“Lucid, reflective, probing, and poetic, Hansen’s book is also a searing critique of the ugly depths of American ignorance, made more dangerous because the declining U.S. imperial system coincides with decay at home. The book is a revelatory indictment of American policy both domestic and foreign, made gripping by Hansen’s confident . . . distillation of complicated historical processes and her detailed, evocative descriptions of places, people, and experiences most American audiences can’t imagine.” —Publishers Weekly (starred and boxed review)

“To be an American is of itself, George Santayana once wrote, a moral condition and education. Notes on a Foreign Country embraces this fate with a unique blend of passionate honesty, coruscating insight, and tenderness. A book of extraordinary power, it achieves something very rare: it opens up new ways of thinking and feeling.” —Pankaj Mishra, author of Age of Anger

“Suzy Hansen’s Notes on a Foreign Country is an essential, compelling read of an American woman’s coming of age and her experience abroad. Hansen describes how her own narrative of the United States’ role in geopolitics began to unravel only once she stepped out of her insular life in New York and into the unfamiliar world of Istanbul. With colorful anecdotes, observations, and telling interviews, Hansen seamlessly weaves together the complex fabric of Turkish society, and with that presents a fresh look at the United States and the perceptions abroad of its foreign policy and of its people.” —Lynsey Addario, photographer and the author of It’s What I Do

“It is rare to come across an American writer who has moved through the world—especially the Islamic world—with the acute self-awareness and thoughtfulness of Suzy Hansen. She has deftly blended memoir, reportage, and history to produce a book of great beauty and intellectual rigor. Everybody interested in America and the Middle East must read it.” —Basharat Peer, author of A Question of Order

Notes On a Foreign Country is at once a kaleidoscopic look at modern Turkey, a meditation on American identity in an age of American decline, and a gripping intellectual bildungsroman. I’m in awe of this wise, coruscating book.” —Michelle Goldberg, author of The Goddess Pose

“It’s really quite simple: if you have any interest at all in how the non-Western world views America and Americans, you must read Suzy Hansen’s beautifully composed memoir Notes on a Foreign Country. And when America’s leaders complain—while campaigning and in office—that there is “great hatred” for the U.S. (and that they want to get to the bottom of it), it should be required reading by government officials—all the way to the Oval Office.” —Hooman Majd, author of The Ayatollah Begs to Differ

Library Journal - Audio

11/15/2017
Journalist Hansen moved to Istanbul in 2007 after receiving a writing fellowship, an experience that challenges her conceptions of America and its role in the world. Despite her Ivy League education, she finds she knows little about international relations or Middle Eastern history. Always believing in America's unselfish goodness and exceptionalism, she is saddened and disillusioned to hear of the negative effects of U.S. empire-building after World War II. Through her interviews and extensive research, she learns that white privilege and Western-style modernization have contributed to government destabilization and the rise of the religious right in such nations as Turkey, Egypt, Greece, Iran, Iraq, Afghanistan, and Pakistan. Having lived in Turkey for several years gives Hansen a unique perspective on the rise of Erdogan. A thorough, courageous, and thoughtful writer, Hansen probes her own prejudices in this coming-of-age memoir and urges Americans to become better informed about the world and try to see America from a broader perspective. VERDICT Though some readers will not appreciate Hansen's revelations, this important book should be read by all thinking Americans who wonder why so many around the world hate this country. ["A unique work that will find its place among a dedicated audience": LJ 6/15/17 review of the Farrar hc.]—Nancy R. Ives, SUNY at Geneseo

Library Journal

06/15/2017
Why do we as a nation, or any imperial nation, perceive ourselves as superior and therefore justified in altering the social and political course of another sovereign nation? These are the questions Hansen (contributor, New York Times Magazine) asked after relocating on fellowship to Turkey in 2007, finding the experience "a shattering and a shame." As an American, Hansen fights cultural bias and delves into Turkey's history to analyze U.S. interference in nations such as Greece and Afghanistan. The author then compares how our role in Turkey informed the present political result—a return to conservatism with the rule of Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan. Hansen argues that even if we are not directly responsible, our undue influence did help to destabilize the region. Following the 2016 attempted military coup in Turkey, this timely account stands on its own. However, a staggering number of travel, scholarly, political, and literary writers are referenced to the detriment of the casual reader. Despite these issues, it remains a unique work that will find its place among a dedicated audience. VERDICT This personal memoir of cultural exploration teaches us how to see the world in greater context.—Jessica Bushore, Xenia, OH

Kirkus Reviews

2017-05-25
A journalist questions the notion of American exceptionalism.When New York Times Magazine contributing writer Hansen arrived in Turkey in 2007 on a research fellowship, she harbored a deep faith in America's "inherent goodness, as well as in my country's Western way of living, and perhaps in my own inherent, God-given, Christian-American goodness as well." She assumed that any nation's move toward modernity "in the American sense" meant progress. Growing up in suburban New Jersey, where international geography had been cut from the school curriculum, she knew little about the world; even as an undergraduate at the University of Pennsylvania, she hardly noticed international events. Living in a "zone of miraculous neutrality" about her country's role in foreign affairs, she naively and complacently believed America to have "uniquely benevolent intentions toward the peoples of the world." That view changed dramatically as she traveled through the Middle East, reading history and political analysis and conducting many interviews in Turkey, Afghanistan, Greece, Egypt, Iraq, and Iran. She discovered that fear of "communism, Islamism, or any other enemyism of the United States" led America to foster military dictatorships rather than risk the outcomes of democratic elections. Talking with Egyptian dissidents and Muslim Brothers, for example, Hansen learned of the corruption, torture, and repression resulting from American efforts to undermine Egypt with the aim of gaining power in the Arab world. She concludes that keeping Americans unaware about global issues has served such efforts, unleashed hatred abroad, and contributed to the rise of Donald Trump. Examining her own identity as an observer and writer forms a recurring theme: was she endorsing America's penchant for denial if she wrote about a foreign country without fully understanding its history, including America's role? Hansen offers a heartfelt plea for empathy and a recognition of "the realities of millions of people," but honing a sophisticated global perspective seems far more complicated than she acknowledges here. A mostly illuminating literary debut that shows how Americans' ignorance about the world has made turmoil and terrorism possible.

Product Details

BN ID: 2940170186112
Publisher: HighBridge Company
Publication date: 08/15/2017
Edition description: Unabridged
From the B&N Reads Blog

Customer Reviews