Your Amazon Prime 30-day FREE trial includes:
| Delivery Options | ![]() |
Without Prime |
|---|---|---|
| Standard Delivery | FREE | From £2.99* |
| Premium Delivery | FREE | £3.95 |
| Same-Day Delivery (on eligible orders over £20 to selected postcodes) Details | FREE | £5.99 |
Unlimited Premium Delivery is available to Amazon Prime members. To join, select "Yes, I want a free trial with FREE Premium Delivery on this order." above the Add to Basket button and confirm your Amazon Prime free trial sign-up.
Important: Your credit card will NOT be charged when you start your free trial or if you cancel during the trial period. If you're happy with Amazon Prime, do nothing. At the end of the free trial, you will be charged £95/year for Prime (annual) membership or £8.99/month for Prime (monthly) membership.
Download the free Kindle app and start reading Kindle books instantly on your smartphone, tablet or computer – no Kindle device required.
Read instantly on your browser with Kindle for Web.
Using your mobile phone camera - scan the code below and download the Kindle app.
Borderline Citizen: Dispatches from the Outskirts of Nationhood (American Lives) Paperback – Illustrated, 1 Mar. 2020
Purchase options and add-ons
Forgoing the exotic descriptions of faraway lands common in traditional travel writing, Borderline Citizen upends the genre with darkly humorous and deeply compassionate glimpses into the lives of exiles, nationalists, refugees, and others. Hemley’s superbly rendered narratives detail these individuals, including a Chinese billionaire who could live anywhere but has chosen to situate his ornate mansion in the middle of his impoverished ancestral village, a black nationalist wanted on thirty-two outstanding FBI warrants exiled in Cuba, and an Afghan refugee whose intentionally altered birth date makes him more easy to deport despite his harrowing past.
Part travelogue, part memoir, part reportage, Borderline Citizen redefines notions of nationhood through an exploration of the arbitrariness of boundaries and what it means to belong.
- Print length216 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherUniversity of Nebraska Press
- Publication date1 Mar. 2020
- Dimensions13.97 x 1.22 x 21.59 cm
- ISBN-101496220412
- ISBN-13978-1496220417
Product description
Review
"A thought-provoking work that troubles the complexities of nationhood."—Wendy Hinman, Foreword Reviews
"Borderline Citizen makes not only for interesting historical reading, but an absorbing vantage on our contemporary crises of belonging."—Justin Tyler Clark, Los Angeles Review of Books
“Robin Hemley explodes the very idea of nationhood and in so doing redefines it, offering a more thoughtful and humane notion of how to be a citizen of our world today. These ‘dispatches’ are travel writing at its best, where the writer delves into the intimacies of foreign places, seeing beyond their exotic surfaces, in search of a global humanity. Brilliantly comic, darkly but poignantly introspective, Borderline Citizen should be required reading for the twenty-first century and beyond.”—Xu Xi, author of This Fish is Fowl: Essays of Being
“Robin Hemley begins Borderline Citizen with the observation that ‘as travelers, we see surfaces first. It’s easy to exoticize, to misinterpret, nearly impossible to see something except through our own lenses.’ He then goes on to show how a thoughtful, perceptive, and open-hearted traveler can overcome all those limitations. In vividly rendered essays, Hemley takes us to some of history’s oddest bits of territory, showing how human lives are shaped (and often distorted) by arbitrary political boundaries. With superb storytelling, he explores the meanings of nationalism, sovereignty, citizenship, and the loyalties of the human heart.”—Corey Flintoff, former NPR foreign correspondent
“In these days of ultranationalism comes a surprising antidote in Robin Hemley’s cabinet of curiosities, Borderline Citizen, his account of his journeys to the ‘bits and bobs’ of national territories stranded by accidents of geography, history, and stubbornness. Hemley is a delightful guide, but there are serious questions for him to explore here as well—and lessons for all the mainlands and mother countries about the meaning and price of national identity. Quite possibly the most original travel book published in years.”—Jeff Sharlet, author of The Family and This Brilliant Darkness
“Robin Hemley has traveled to more countries than just about anyone I know, and along the way he’s collected vital observations on the tragic absurdity of nationalism and the implicit violence of a world crisscrossed with borders. I think of him in the company of Pankaj Mishra, Pico Iyer, Bruce Chatwin, and John Berger—writers whose transnational souls challenge the idea of a single place of origin.”—Jess Row, author of White Flights and Your Face in Mine
“This is a book of daring travel and quiet observation. Borderline Citizen challenges common constructs of national borders, patriotism, and citizenship to shed an urgent light on the exile’s predicament. With a sharp wit guided by empathy, Hemley has written a necessary and entirely unique book about what it really means to belong in a divided world.”—Jennifer Percy, journalist and author of Demon Camp
“Robin Hemley is a born traveler, and in Borderline Citizen he visits exclaves, enclaves, and places in between to explore what loyalty to and love of a country mean. In Havana and Hong Kong, Kaliningrad and the Falkland Islands, he poses questions about identity, a complicated subject for many in the twenty-first century, and what he learns along the way is by turns illuminating and amazing. Thus a journey to an artificial rain forest in Nebraska inspires a meditation on authenticity, which reveals that in these uncertain times there is no better guide to the challenges we face than Robin Hemley.”—Christopher Merrill, author of Self-Portrait with Dogwood
“Few writers have traveled as voraciously as Robin Hemley, and none with his special blend of curiosity, heart, and wit. His latest collection interrogates the idea of nationhood by spotlighting a wide spectrum of citizens—from an Afghan refugee to a Chinese billionaire—to prove that personhood is all that matters in the end. At a time when nationalism is resurging around the globe, Hemley bolsters the spirit with this vibrant read.”—Stephanie Elizondo Griest, author of All the Agents and Saints: Dispatches from the U.S. Borderlands
About the Author
Product details
- Publisher : University of Nebraska Press; Illustrated edition (1 Mar. 2020)
- Language : English
- Paperback : 216 pages
- ISBN-10 : 1496220412
- ISBN-13 : 978-1496220417
- Dimensions : 13.97 x 1.22 x 21.59 cm
- Customer reviews:
About the author

Discover more of the author’s books, see similar authors, read author blogs and more
Customer reviews
Customer Reviews, including Product Star Ratings, help customers to learn more about the product and decide whether it is the right product for them.
To calculate the overall star rating and percentage breakdown by star, we don’t use a simple average. Instead, our system considers things like how recent a review is and if the reviewer bought the item on Amazon. It also analyses reviews to verify trustworthiness.
Learn more how customers reviews work on Amazon-
Top reviews
Top reviews from United Kingdom
There was a problem filtering reviews right now. Please try again later.
The book is very much a stream of consciousness and author Robin Hemley also discusses the casual racism thrown at at his Filipina wife and the barbaric behaviour of the Japanese in The Philippines as part of his discussion about racial identity.I could relate to both knowing Filipino survivors of the occupation and having a very dark Filipino friend who more than once has overheard Americans asking, "who's the Nigerian?" within earshot not realising he speaks and understands English as well as they do.
A very good point that Hemley makes is that most countries are relatively new and borders change all the time but nationalists invariably invoke their country's "ancient" status as reason/excuse to see their country as somehow superior to those of others, Great Britain for example is less than 300 years old,, Italy and Germany much younger.
Hemley travels the world meeting people for whom the subject of their nationality affects their lives , he speaks to refugees, those living in places where the borders have changed around them and places where they cross a border several times just walking down the road.
An excellent and engrossing read , I read it in one sitting , that shows how which side of a line on a map or a border fence someone lives can have a massive effect on their life.
Thanks to Robin Hemley, University of Nebraska Press and Netgalley for the ARC in return for an honest review,
The British Raj didn't have problems over who was which citizen; when they left, India divided into India and two portions of Pakistan, and somehow a lot of stray villages and farms were on either side according to which mughal lord used to own them. Then Bangladesh broke away from Pakistan and that confused matters more. Finally as the writer visits, the drawn out court issues have been concluded with territory swaps, offers to rehome people, passport changes, and massive fence building projects. Foreseeably, some of the impecunious villagers say they were badly treated by neighbours because they lived in another country's farm; some chose to stay put and hope they would now be accepted while most chose to move to India since they already had Indian passports. Few wanted to move in the other direction. (A revisit found the newcomers hadn't prospered.)
A more cheerful look at the craziness of Netherlands and Belgium, in which a village's streets are bisected, is just begging to be compared and contrasted with Northern Ireland, in my opinion, but this doesn't occur.
Kaliningrad and a bitter, war-torn past; a political refugee of sorts in Cuba; the rudeness of the Chinese and Filipinas and others on race issues; a not-seeming to fit section on small segments of rainforest available to the tourist; a Chinese merchant who prospered beyond the local imagining and buys up everything expensive from pangolins for eating to endangered rainforest wood for ornament. There's more, but perhaps the most memorable interview is with a young man migrant to Australia from Afghanistan, who can't be a citizen and can't work, and can't go home because his family have been killed.
Hemley himself wonders if travel writers should do their job when greenhouse gases are flooding the planet. I would tend to wonder that too, but if they base themselves in one area and write about that area, travelling as the locals do, they are minimising their footprint and save the rest of us from doing all that travel to find out what's in those places. Upon being challenged - is he a journalist - Hemley describes himself as a professor. I believe a journalist would have gone further in finding and reporting conflicts of today, but Hemley does at times relate more than is comfortable about the past.
This book will be of interest to armchair travellers, anthropologists, international business students, world geopolitics students and environmentalists. Between the South American locals felling rare trees to sell to Asia and the Chinese squatting among their cracking trunks, we can piece together a picture of the destruction caused by too many humans, who are often, we see, no kinder to humans.
I read an e-ARC from Net Galley. This is an unbiased review.
He visits such places as The Falkland Islands where the inhabitants cling to a form of Brutishness that now seems antiquated and strange, and Kaliningrad where the ethnicity of the area has changed. Meeting exiles, refugees, nationalists and colonial settlers, this is a fascinating book that poses some pretty fundamental questions in a world where borders seem to be becoming more defined both physically and metaphysically. Well worth a read.
A review copy was provided by the publisher.
