4.9 • 1.8K Ratings
🗓️ 11 June 2024
⏱️ 12 minutes
🧾️ Download transcript
You can listen to the full episode "Suburban Hell and Ugly Cities" by subscribing to our Patreon here: https://www.patreon.com/upstreampodcast
As a Patreon subscriber, not only will you get access to at least one bonus episode a month, usually two or three, as well as early access to certain episodes and other benefits like stickers and bumper stickers, depending on which tier you subscribe to, but you’ll also be helping to keep Upstream sustainable and allowing us to keep this project going. Find out more at Patreon.com/upstreampodcast or at upstreampodcast.org/support. Thank you.
Why is even just driving through suburbia soul crushing? Why are so many cities and towns in the United States so…ugly? All of us here would probably agree that car-centric city planning and corporate development are huge factors to consider when asking these questions. But what exactly about this type of planning and development is it that feels so oppressive? What exactly is it about that strip mall that makes your heart sink? What exactly is it about that suburban lawn that makes you feel so uncannily uncomfortable? These are some of the questions that we explore in this Patreon episode.
In this episode Robert reads and comments on two separate but related pieces: Why even driving through suburbia is soul crushing, by Alex Balashov and Compromise, Hell! by Wendell Berry. These pieces explore the anti-social, barren, and soul-crushing aspects of how we, under late-stage capitalism here in the United States, design the spaces we travel through and live in. From freeway interchanges that jut out like decaying exo-skeletons, to the barren eight-late expressways that cut neighborhoods in half, to the giant lawns, fake porches, and kitschy columns that ornament many suburban homes—this reading not only calls out these monstrosities but explains what they do to us on a psychological, nervous system, and social level.
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0:00.0 | All right, hey everybody, welcome back to another Patreon episode of Upstream. |
0:06.9 | As you might have guessed, since we're jumping right in with no intro music or anything, |
0:12.0 | this is going to be another reading and I actually think I might try |
0:15.6 | to squeeze in two different pieces in this episode that are somewhat related. |
0:20.9 | But really there's not going to be much continuity between the last readings, which were more along the themes of imperialism and Palestine. |
0:30.0 | I'm actually going to be reading a couple of pieces today that I came across many years ago, |
0:35.3 | which I've always loved, and were pretty formative in many ways for me. |
0:40.7 | And I actually have to do with how we design the spaces that we live in and what that means for us |
0:47.0 | sort of psychologically and socially and I guess sort of maybe the political aspects of urban design and architecture. |
0:55.6 | I haven't read either of these pieces in at least a few years though, so I'm kind of |
1:01.2 | revisiting them and I'm really excited to read them from a hopefully somewhat more matured and developed perspective. |
1:09.0 | You know, now that I've really taken a deep dive into Marxism in the last few years. |
1:13.6 | It's hard not to analyze everything through that lens. |
1:16.3 | And so some of that may come up. |
1:18.6 | You know, I may even have some disagreements or criticisms. |
1:22.3 | I know both of the authors are not Marxists and so yeah I'm |
1:27.0 | really not sure but I'm very excited to find out and I hope that you guys find it interesting |
1:32.1 | as well. |
1:33.0 | Just a quick note before we get started, |
1:35.0 | I've really been loving the community that we've built on Patreon |
1:39.0 | and you know honestly I've actually stopped responding to comments and messages as much on |
1:44.0 | Instagram because I just can't really keep up with it and it actually feels like |
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