Duo creates app-based audio tour exploring KC’s history of segregation

April 26, 2018  |  Bobby Burch

Dividing Lines 2

Most Kansas Citians are uninformed on the area’s segregated past, Nathaniel Bozarth said.

“To be quite honest, I’m convinced that this ignorance is by design,” said Bozarth, a Kansas City ethnographer and host of the Wide Ruled podcast. “White America does not want to deal with the sins of our fathers and our own sins with regards to racism. We want it to be a bad dream and to just go away.”

Bozarth and Cook

Responding to that ignorance helped drive Bozarth and Christopher Cook on a storytelling mission to creatively document historical racial divisions in the Kansas City metro that were shaped in large part by real estate development.

Commissioned by the Johnson County Library for its Race Project KC initiative, the duo tapped Bozarth’s experience working with audio tour technology for the Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art to create an immersive experience to educate people as they drive through the metro. The audio tour — dubbed Dividing Lines — is a 90-minute story set along 24 miles in Johnson County and Kansas City, Missouri.

During the tour, Bozarth interviews students and various city figures who add historical context to what listeners see along the drive. The interviews and story combine to create what Bozarth hopes is a moving experience that opens the listener up to the foundational issues of racial division in Kansas City, he said.

The tour can be visceral, shocking and heart-wrenching, Bozarth added.

“I hope that listeners will be deeply affected by Dividing Lines on both an emotional and cognitive level,” he said. “I hope that listeners go away with a deeper understanding of what it means for a problem to be systemic or structural as we call it in anthropology. Racism, as it is lived out today, is as much tactical — a white person calling a black person the n-word or telling a Latinx person to go home — as it is built into our spaces. I want people to really marinate in that uncomfortable thought.

“And I hope that it will cause them to think about their own actions and how they participate and perpetuate inequitable systems. Eliminating racism isn’t about finding the bad guy out there — it’s about finding the bad guy in here, in me,” Bozarth said.

To take the free tour, download the VoiceMap app on your mobile device and then search in the app to find and download Dividing Lines. Once you’ve downloaded it, use the app to navigate to the tour’s starting point — Shawnee Mission East High School — and hit start.

Listeners start in Prairie Village, winding their way northeast through Mission Hills and the Plaza before heading north on Highway 71 and into eastern Kansas City, downtown, 18th and Vine and concluding near Hyde Park.

Bozarth and Cook have crafted many video and audio stories, but with Dividing Lines, there were added challenges with content and production, Bozarth said

“The process was highly emotional for both reasons of the heart-crushing content and the deep passion to get it right,” he said. “Christopher Cook, owner of Brainroot Light and Sound and also a producer on Dividing Lines, and I had as much creative tension on this project as any of our projects. He and I both firmly believe, however, that our creative tension and the resolutions that follow are what makes our end product sing.”

To learn more about the tour or to download it, click here.

startland-tip-jar

TIP JAR

Did you enjoy this post? Show your support by becoming a member or buying us a coffee.

Tagged , , ,
Featured Business
    Featured Founder

      2018 Startups to Watch

        stats here

        Related Posts on Startland News

        Roberts: 5 things the world can learn from KC entrepreneurs

        By Tommy Felts | September 16, 2015

        This week, entrepreneurship is king in Kansas City. As we welcome the world to our burgeoning tech hub during Techweek, it’s tempting to think that Kansas City’s startup community is a new phenomenon. But in fact, the names of the city fathers (and mothers) — the Kauffmans, Kempers, Blochs and Helzbergs — that adorn almost…

        After new regulations, Uber opens KC office

        By Tommy Felts | September 16, 2015

        Uber is spreading deeper roots in the Kansas City metro after new regulations have allowed the ride-sharing giant to operate legally in Kansas and Missouri. The San Francisco-based company is currently renovating a new Kansas City office on McGee Street near the Power and Light District, said Andy Hung, general manager of Uber Kansas City.…

        Kansas City receives new tech-focused jobs board

        By Tommy Felts | September 16, 2015

        Businesses both big and small looking to fill technology positions in their companies have a new outlet to find talent: KCnext’s new job board. In conjunction with Kansas City’s inaugural Techweek, the KCnext team announced Chute Wednesday to help area businesses in their recruiting efforts — whether they’re members of the tech council or not. Millennials have shed light on…

        Neighborly nabs $5.5M from Formation 8, Ashton Kutcher

        By Tommy Felts | September 15, 2015

        Neighborly, a San Francisco-based startup with an office in Kansas City, recently landed a multi-million dollar investment for its community investment marketplace. The company, which relocated its headquarters from Kansas City to San Francisco after struggling to raise local capital, raised $5.5 million from venture capital firms Formation 8 and Ashton Kutcher’s Sound Ventures, according…