It's 2074 and Slabua suicide bomber has killed the President of the United States. Months later Marines open fire on protesters killing dozens. The Second American Civil War has just begun and once again the North and South are pitted against each other. This is all according to the dystopian world chronicled in Omar El Akkad's novel, American War. El Akkad's imagined, yet familiar, world is reflective of today's deep political and societal fissures, but it also pushes us to understand the universal language of war and ruin, to what happens after the violence begins and why it's so hard to end.
In this episode of Throughline, we immerse ourselves in El Akkad's 'what could be' to understand larger questions about history, humanity, and American exceptionalism.
2025-05-07 18:17331 view
2025-05-07 18:07107 view
2025-05-07 17:411788 view
2025-05-07 17:341736 view
2025-05-07 16:532388 view
2025-05-07 15:551514 view
In the wake of a high-profile court decision that upended the state of Montana’s climate policy, Rep
The Detroit Three automakers are the win that the United Auto Workers needed to perhaps finally orga
Former President Donald Trump says he looks forward to debating President Biden and also didn't rule