Coming to maturity in the post 9/11 media filled with dueling characters like Bill O’Reilly and Jon Stewart made politics’ influence on identity a major source of frustration and creativity. I have been using photography as a way to study consumerism, national identity, and the individual's relation to the group. From the Civil War through World War II, America saw internal migrations take place that would define its structure for the next century. While the Great Migration of Black Americans from the South to Northern cities created a more racialized liberal politic, how did southerners moving to new rural landscapes inform America’s current political map? In Another American Place I look at the route stretching from the American South to California’s Central Valley. How has a populations identity evolved in a landscape filled with a corporatized and industrialized homogeneity?