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Airplane Mode: A Passive Aggressive History Of Travel

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Airplane Mode: A Passive Aggressive History Of Travel

Airplane Mode: A Passive Aggressive History Of Travel

Airplane Mode: A Passive-Aggressive History of Travel is a bold, witty, deeply personal look at travel as a cultural practice. Part travel writing, part cultural history, this book invites adult readers and curious explorers to consider who gets to travel and how those journeys are narrated in a world shaped by colonial histories, capitalism, and climate change. The tone is playful yet piercing, educational but never preachy, making it a compelling read for anyone who loves thinking about where they go and why.

Shahnaz Habib writes in a warm, lucid voice that moves between childhood memories in India, her life as an immigrant in Brooklyn, and careful historical analysis. Airplane Mode unfolds as a collection of interconnected essays that blend storytelling with cultural critique, using travel artifacts—passports, guidebooks, carousels, trains—as springboards to bigger conversations about who gets to travel, who gets to narrate those journeys, and why. The writing balances personal intimacy with rigorous context, making the experience engaging, thought-provoking, and accessible. Key concepts include privilege and voice in travel, postcolonial critiques of tourism, and the climate realities behind contemporary wanderlust, all explored through personal anecdotes—from childhood trips in India to Habib's life in Brooklyn—creating a travel writing that is both intimate and incisive.

  • Personal and cultural history of travel from a Third World-raised woman of color
  • Essays blending childhood memories of India with immigrant life in Brooklyn
  • In-depth analysis of travel artifacts—passports, guidebooks, carousels, trains
  • Exploration of privilege, colonial legacies, and climate change in modern travel
  • Witty, accessible writing that balances humor with serious critique
  • Interconnected essays weaving narrative and historical context

After finishing Airplane Mode: A Passive-Aggressive History of Travel, readers gain a nuanced understanding of what travel means today and are invited to approach their own journeys with greater empathy, curiosity, and responsibility. It leaves you thinking differently about destinations, narratives, and the ways we move through the world—and offers a lasting invitation to travel with intention.

$1.91

Original: $6.38

-70%
Airplane Mode: A Passive Aggressive History Of Travel

$6.38

$1.91

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Airplane Mode: A Passive-Aggressive History of Travel is a bold, witty, deeply personal look at travel as a cultural practice. Part travel writing, part cultural history, this book invites adult readers and curious explorers to consider who gets to travel and how those journeys are narrated in a world shaped by colonial histories, capitalism, and climate change. The tone is playful yet piercing, educational but never preachy, making it a compelling read for anyone who loves thinking about where they go and why.

Shahnaz Habib writes in a warm, lucid voice that moves between childhood memories in India, her life as an immigrant in Brooklyn, and careful historical analysis. Airplane Mode unfolds as a collection of interconnected essays that blend storytelling with cultural critique, using travel artifacts—passports, guidebooks, carousels, trains—as springboards to bigger conversations about who gets to travel, who gets to narrate those journeys, and why. The writing balances personal intimacy with rigorous context, making the experience engaging, thought-provoking, and accessible. Key concepts include privilege and voice in travel, postcolonial critiques of tourism, and the climate realities behind contemporary wanderlust, all explored through personal anecdotes—from childhood trips in India to Habib's life in Brooklyn—creating a travel writing that is both intimate and incisive.

  • Personal and cultural history of travel from a Third World-raised woman of color
  • Essays blending childhood memories of India with immigrant life in Brooklyn
  • In-depth analysis of travel artifacts—passports, guidebooks, carousels, trains
  • Exploration of privilege, colonial legacies, and climate change in modern travel
  • Witty, accessible writing that balances humor with serious critique
  • Interconnected essays weaving narrative and historical context

After finishing Airplane Mode: A Passive-Aggressive History of Travel, readers gain a nuanced understanding of what travel means today and are invited to approach their own journeys with greater empathy, curiosity, and responsibility. It leaves you thinking differently about destinations, narratives, and the ways we move through the world—and offers a lasting invitation to travel with intention.