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Episode #1034

#1034 - Sebastian Junger

November 6, 20172:03:01
Sebastian Junger
Sebastian Junger

Sebastian Junger is an American author, journalist, and documentary filmmaker whose works chronicle perilous human endeavors and the bonds forged in adversity, most prominently through the #1 New York Times bestselling book The Perfect Storm (1997), which detailed the final voyage of the swordfishing boat Andrea Gail during a massive Atlantic storm, and the Academy Award-nominated documentary Restrepo (2010), co-directed with Tim Hetherington. As a contributing editor at Vanity Fair and special correspondent for ABC News, Junger has embedded in high-risk environments, including extended periods with U.S. combat units in Afghanistan's Korengal Valley, yielding immersive reporting on warfare's visceral realities. Junger's oeuvre extends to books like War (2010), drawn from his frontline experiences, and Tribe: On Homecoming and Belonging (2016), which posits that humans thrive in tight-knit groups akin to hunter-gatherer societies and that modern individualism contributes to societal malaise, including elevated veteran suicide rates due to severed communal ties rather than combat trauma alone. His recent memoir In My Time of Dying (2024) recounts a near-death aneurysm, probing consciousness and mortality through personal and scientific lenses. Honored with a National Magazine Award and a Peabody Award, Junger's output challenges prevailing narratives on progress and psychology, emphasizing empirical observation of behavior in extremis over institutionalized theories. Sebastian Junger was born in 1962 in Belmont, Massachusetts , a prosperous suburb northwest of Boston , to Miguel Chapero Junger, a physicist , and Ellen Sinclair, a painter. His parents married in 1960 after meeting in Boston , with his father, then 37, having recently completed a PhD in physics at Harvard and his mother, 29, pursuing her artistic career following studies at the Museum School. Junger's father was born in 1923 in Dresden , Germany , to a left-wing Jewish journalist father and an Austrian socialite mother; the family relocated to Madrid , where he lived until fleeing the fascist uprising in 1936 at age 13 amid the Spanish Civil War . They escaped to France with minimal possessions, later fleeing Paris in 1940 as Nazi forces advanced, moving through Biarritz and briefly back to Spain before reaching the United States in the 1940s via freighter to Baltimore . Fluent in five languages, Miguel Junger contributed to U.S. military projects, including jet engine research during World War II . His mother's family traced artistic and narrative roots to an ancestor related to the Brothers Grimm , a folklorist who emigrated to fight in the American Revolution . Junger's upbringing in Belmont's liberal, anti-Vietnam War community was profoundly shaped by his father's refugee experiences, which instilled a deep wariness of fascism as an ultimate evil propagated by lies that erode democratic trust. Miguel emphasized civic duty—such as registering for the draft at age 18 while reserving the right to protest immoral wars, even at personal cost—alongside gratitude for America's refuge from totalitarianism . These lessons, drawn from personal anecdotes like deceiving a German officer during an escape, reinforced in Junger a commitment to confronting authoritarian threats through truth and national service . Junger was born on January 17, 1962, in Belmont, Massachusetts , a suburb outside Boston , to Miguel Junger, a physicist and Jewish refugee who fled Francoist Spain in 1936 and Nazi-occupied France before settling in the United States, and Ellen Sinclair, an artist. His upbringing occurred in a liberal household amid the Vietnam War era, marked by prevalent anti-war sentiment and his father's pacifist leanings tempered by recognition of the U.S. role in defeating fascism during World War II .

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About this episode

Sebastian Junger is the author of The Perfect Storm, War, and Tribe. He also is the co-director of the Oscar-nominated documentary “Restrepo.” His latest documentary “Hell On Earth” can been seen on NatGeo.

Books mentioned

Our Political Nature: The Evolutionary Origins of What Divides Us
Tribe: On Homecoming and Belonging

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