Rabu, 08 Januari 2014

PDF Download , by Joan Didion

PDF Download , by Joan Didion

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, by Joan Didion

, by Joan Didion


, by Joan Didion


PDF Download , by Joan Didion

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, by Joan Didion

Product details

File Size: 230 KB

Print Length: 112 pages

Page Numbers Source ISBN: 0679751831

Publisher: Vintage; Reprint edition (January 5, 2011)

Publication Date: January 5, 2011

Sold by: Amazon Digital Services LLC

Language: English

ASIN: B004HFRJIU

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Amazon Best Sellers Rank:

#182,194 Paid in Kindle Store (See Top 100 Paid in Kindle Store)

The four instead of five stars reflects my reaction to her writing style. She uses too many obscure words, as unusual as that is for a teacher to say. Her word choice could sometimes impact her clarity. Well worth the read though and I recommend it highly for anyone studying Latin America during the Cold War or involved with studies in genocide.

It would be false to say that I was ever truly familiar with the situation in El Salvador at any time, not truly, and what makes Didion's Salvador such an extraordinary essay is that it so thoroughly and eloquently elucidates a time and place, but does so with specifics that feel as endemic to any political crisis now, or any 100 years ago. In her first chapter, she describes her experience in El Salvador by saying "I came to understand, in a way I had not understood before, the exact mechanism of terror." Salvador is an extraordinarily precise evocation of El Salvador in 1982, of the failure of Reagan's policies there, but what makes it still relevant is exactly that evocation of mechanics, of the bodies at the morgue that add up but don't amount to a story, of the shudder of fear at the sight of headlights in a dark dining room, of the shifting game of verbiage that describes progress or failure or civil wars or assassinations. What I mean is that Salvador will move and feel familiar to anyone, and that, at the point she describes the particular failing of America that allows us to approach this conflict as "something of the familiar ineffable, as if it were taking place not in El Salvador but in a mirage of El Salvador," it will seem the most reasoned, obvious, and unsettling conclusion about national and international conflicts.

Joan Didion gleaned the essential reality of El Salvadoran society in the 1980's, after only a short stay in the country. I believe she was there as a journalist or correspondent, who based her stark account on conversations with citizens, diplomats, and military personnel, as well as her own keen eye. She showed an uncanny gift for pinpointing the elemental truth behind every minor detail. For example, she noticed that all the male folkloric dancers at a village festival were either elderly men or young boys and that the awkward steps of their dance seemed tentative and confused. This dramatized both the Civil War's near-elimination of men in their prime and the paralysis of a society lost in violence. Every anecdote is vivid and each spare sentence convinces us of the utter tragedy and senseless waste of El Salvador's Civil War. Corruption, denial and passivity caused incomprehensible human suffering, while apparently intentional ignorance granted a continuous flow of military aid from the U.S.A., despite the blatant, savage inhumanity of the Salvadoran army and the National Guard. Even Didion's mention of U.S. embassy staff language underlines their imperviousness: they nicknamed the weekly report of murdered Salvadoran citizens, "the grim-gram." In her short volume, Joan Didion provides an unforgettable glimpse of a society mired in brutality, under the blind veil of double-speak from armies and congresses on both sides of the border. If we cling to the belief that suffering has a purpose, then the graceful witness of this book will help prevent future United States blunders in foreign policy.

While this book was interesting, it was too round about in how it was written. At the end of reading it I was not sure what point the author was trying to make about El Salvador. I came away from it thinking that El Salvador is a very messed up country I would never want to visit, but I doubt that was the message the author was trying to send away.

Excellent!

After reading Slouching Toward Jeruselum I was left wanting more Didion.  Stretch's review of Salvador and my own interest in the history of U.S. involvement there made it the next logical choice.  My four children were mostly out of toddlerhood when this was happening, and my attention was again turning outward.  This was really when I first more deeply understood some new things:  my country was not the good guy, both sides in this conflict were slaughtering people, there were more than two sides, it was way more complicated than good guy vs. bad guy.  (Yeah, I'm a slow learner.)It was intriguing to see Didion's writing applied to such a topic as Salvador and the ugliness that was happening.  I especially appreciated the way she compared Salvadoran use of language to more linear U.S. language use, especially in the use of numbers.  She talked about Salvadoran use as being more generally descriptive of their world beyond numbers and into deeper meaning and how this was misunderstood by Americans.  It reminded me of a ten year old client who kept insisting there were hundreds of empty beer bottles at his dad's house.  His mom was upset and wanted him to be more specific because he was going to have to testify in court.  He was an exceptionally bright child so she could not understand nor tolerate his exaggeration.  She finally got it tho - he wasn't telling her how many bottles there were.  He was telling her how scared and overwhelmed he felt.   Didion talks about this difficulty describing Salvador in terms many of us understand, that she found herself without the words.I found this to be a balanced perspective. Regardless of what Didion thought when she first went to Salvador, she learned a lot about different "sides" and addressed that. She found it to be a multi-sided population, difficult to pigeon hole.It's an interesting and quick read at only 100 pages.  I had my first Salvadoran student in the early 2000s and wish I could have had more time with him.  I'd like current information on it if anyone has any suggestions for sources.

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