Antipodes: Ways to See the World

This thesis is an examination of the geographical oddities of my past, the process of transitioning between worlds, and the kinds of relationships that survive those transitions. In a world where I can fly from Atlanta to Beijing non-stop in fifteen hours, I sometimes convince myself that geography...

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Other Authors: Sallee, Brenda (Author), Neal, Mary (Committee Chair), Bartkevicius, Jocelyn (Committee Member), Poissant, David (Committee Member), (Committee Member), University of Central Florida (Degree Grantor)
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: University of Central Florida
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Online Access:http://purl.flvc.org/ucf/fd/CFE0004746
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spelling ftucentralflordl:oai:ucf.digital.flvc.org:ucf_49765 2023-11-12T04:13:43+01:00 Antipodes: Ways to See the World Sallee, Brenda (Author) Neal, Mary (Committee Chair) Bartkevicius, Jocelyn (Committee Member) Poissant, David (Committee Member) (Committee Member) University of Central Florida (Degree Grantor) http://purl.flvc.org/ucf/fd/CFE0004746 English eng University of Central Florida CFE0004746 ucf:49765 http://purl.flvc.org/ucf/fd/CFE0004746 campus 2018-05-15 creative nonfiction--memoir Text ftucentralflordl 2023-10-24T16:36:28Z This thesis is an examination of the geographical oddities of my past, the process of transitioning between worlds, and the kinds of relationships that survive those transitions. In a world where I can fly from Atlanta to Beijing non-stop in fifteen hours, I sometimes convince myself that geography no longer matters. I was born in the tropics, raised in the arctic, and became a dual citizen of the same two countries twice. I could distinguish gunshots from fireworks by age five and have ridden the Trans-Siberian Railroad in both directions. I have milked a water buffalo and played Tchaikovsky's piano and been interrogated by a Maoist by firelight on the top of a mountain at the far western edge of the earth. I have seen the Louvre and the Hermitage and the highest point in Iowa and The Pit, the outhouse that connects directly to Hell. I sometimes believe I can go anywhere. See anything. Befriend anyone. But I deceive myself. Some places are so far away, it takes years to settle, to adjust, to reach a level of familiarity where the world outside your window, and the people in that world, no longer shock you. I have seldom stayed that long.The transient life does not get easier, but you can get better at it. I have gotten better at it. Distance is a matter of perspective and convenience and desire. The farther two places, or two people, or two lifestyles are from each other, the subtler and more intricate the connecting lines. My contentment and sanity and relationships depend upon deciphering those lines. This is the story of what I've learned. 2013-05-01 M.F.A. Arts and Humanities, English Masters This record was generated from author submitted information. Text Arctic UCF Digital Collections (University of Central Florida) Arctic
institution Open Polar
collection UCF Digital Collections (University of Central Florida)
op_collection_id ftucentralflordl
language English
topic creative nonfiction--memoir
spellingShingle creative nonfiction--memoir
Antipodes: Ways to See the World
topic_facet creative nonfiction--memoir
description This thesis is an examination of the geographical oddities of my past, the process of transitioning between worlds, and the kinds of relationships that survive those transitions. In a world where I can fly from Atlanta to Beijing non-stop in fifteen hours, I sometimes convince myself that geography no longer matters. I was born in the tropics, raised in the arctic, and became a dual citizen of the same two countries twice. I could distinguish gunshots from fireworks by age five and have ridden the Trans-Siberian Railroad in both directions. I have milked a water buffalo and played Tchaikovsky's piano and been interrogated by a Maoist by firelight on the top of a mountain at the far western edge of the earth. I have seen the Louvre and the Hermitage and the highest point in Iowa and The Pit, the outhouse that connects directly to Hell. I sometimes believe I can go anywhere. See anything. Befriend anyone. But I deceive myself. Some places are so far away, it takes years to settle, to adjust, to reach a level of familiarity where the world outside your window, and the people in that world, no longer shock you. I have seldom stayed that long.The transient life does not get easier, but you can get better at it. I have gotten better at it. Distance is a matter of perspective and convenience and desire. The farther two places, or two people, or two lifestyles are from each other, the subtler and more intricate the connecting lines. My contentment and sanity and relationships depend upon deciphering those lines. This is the story of what I've learned. 2013-05-01 M.F.A. Arts and Humanities, English Masters This record was generated from author submitted information.
author2 Sallee, Brenda (Author)
Neal, Mary (Committee Chair)
Bartkevicius, Jocelyn (Committee Member)
Poissant, David (Committee Member)
(Committee Member)
University of Central Florida (Degree Grantor)
format Text
title Antipodes: Ways to See the World
title_short Antipodes: Ways to See the World
title_full Antipodes: Ways to See the World
title_fullStr Antipodes: Ways to See the World
title_full_unstemmed Antipodes: Ways to See the World
title_sort antipodes: ways to see the world
publisher University of Central Florida
url http://purl.flvc.org/ucf/fd/CFE0004746
geographic Arctic
geographic_facet Arctic
genre Arctic
genre_facet Arctic
op_relation CFE0004746
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op_rights campus 2018-05-15
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