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The Guatemala Reader: Latin America Readers

Editat de Greg Grandin, Deborah T. Levenson, Elizabeth Oglesby
en Limba Engleză Paperback – 30 oct 2011
This reader brings together more than 200 texts and images in a broad introduction to Guatemala’s history, culture, and politics. In choosing selections to include, the editors sought to avoid representing the country only in terms of its long experience of conflict, racism, and violence. And so, while offering many perspectives on that violence, this anthology portrays Guatemala as a real place where people experience joys and sorrows that cannot be reduced to the contretemps of resistance and repression. It includes not only the opinions of politicians, activists, and scholars but also poems, songs, plays, jokes, novels, short stories, recipes, art, and photographs that capture the diversity of everyday life in Guatemala. The editors introduce all of the selections, from the first piece, an excerpt from the Popol Vuh, a mid-sixteenth-century text believed to be the single most important source documenting pre-Hispanic Maya culture, through the final selections, which explore contemporary Guatemala in relation to neoliberalism, multiculturalism, and the dynamics of migration to the United States and of immigrant life. Many pieces were originally published in Spanish, and most of those appear in English for the first time.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9780822351078
ISBN-10: 0822351072
Pagini: 663
Ilustrații: 105 illustrations, 10 colour plates, 1 map
Dimensiuni: 152 x 231 x 41 mm
Greutate: 1.02 kg
Editura: Duke University Press
Seria Latin America Readers


Cuprins

Illustrations; Acknowledgments; IntroductionPart I: The Maya: Before the EuropeansPopol Vul / Unknown K’iche’ Authors; Breaking the Maya Code / Michael D. Coe; Bonampak Mural / Unknown Artists; Gendered Nobility / Rosemary A. Joyce; Rabinal Achi / Anonymous; Apocalypto / Bruce WaterfieldPart II: Invasion and ColonialismInvading Guatemala / Various Authors; Tecún Umán and the Conquest Dance / Irma Otzoy; Great Was the Stench of the Dead / W. George Lovell; Good Government / Bishop Francisco Marroquín; For the Eyes of Our King / Various Authors; Colonial Cartographies / Various Authors; All Sorts and Colors / Thomas Gage; A Creole Landscape / Francisco Antonio Fuentes y Guzmán; Chocolate, Sex and Disorderly Women / Martha Few; Fugitive Indians / Archbishop Pedro Cortés y Larraz; An Indian King on the Eve of Independence / Aaron PollackPart III: A Caffeinated ModernismTravels Amongst Indians / Lindesay Brine; Land, Labor, and Community / David McCreery; The Saddest Day in Cantel / Anonymous; The Ladino / Severo Martínez Peláez; Accustomed to Be Obedient / Richard N. Adams; Guatemala Facing the Lens / Images from CIRMA’s photographic archive; Conquest of the Tropics / Frederick U. Adams; Marimba / Arturo Taracena Arriola; ¿Vos Sos Guatemalteco? / Proyecto Lingüístico Quezalteco de Español; A Taste of History / Popular Guatemalan Recipes; Magical Modernism / Catherine Rendón; El Señor Presidente / Miguel Angel Asturias; La Chalana / Miguel Angel Asturias, Alfredo Valle Claro, David Vela, José Luis Barcárcel; Indigenismo and ‘The Generation of the 1920s’ / Image by Carlos Mérida; A Mexican Bolshevik in Central America / Jorge Fernández Anaya, interviewed by Carlos Figueroa Ibarra; Anthropology Discovers the Maya / Carol A. Smith; Hymn to the Sun / Jesús CastilloPart IV: Ten Years of Spring and BeyondThe Best Time of My Life / Luis Cardoza y Aragón; A New Guatemala / Juan José Arévalo; Pablo Neruda in Guatemala / Pablo Neruda; If That is Communism, Then We Are Communists / Miguel Marmól, as recorded by Robert Alexander; Most Precious Fruit of the Revolution / Government of Guatemala; Arevalista to Counterrevolutionary / Luis Tárano, interviewed by Elizabeth Oglesby and Simone Remijnse; Enemies of Christ / Archbishop Mariano Rossell y Arellano; Operation PBSUCCESS / Central Intelligence Agency; Sabotage for Liberty / Absolutely Secret; A Plan for Assassination / Central Intelligence Agency; Military Dream / César Brañas; We Are Officers of the Guatemalan Army / November 13 Rebel Movement; Long Live the Students! / Miguel Angel Sandoval and María del Rosario Ramírez; Denied in Full / Central Intelligence Agency; Maybe, Just Maybe / René Leiva; Guatemala and Vietnam / James S. Corum; Second Thoughts / Viron Vaky; The Sweetest Songs Remain to Be Sung / Huberto AlvaradoPart V: Roads to RevolutionA Clandestine Life / Greg Grandin; Whose Heaven, Whose Earth? / Thomas Melville; Life on the Edge / Deborah Levenson; Christ, Worker / Voz y Acción; Campesinos In Search of a Different Future / José Manuel Fernández y Fernández; Execution of a Chicken / Manuel José Arce; Blood in Our Throats / Betsy Konefal; Guerrilla Armies of the Poor / Fuerzas Armada Rebeldes, Ejército Guerrillero de los Pobres, and Organización Revolucionaria del Pueblo en Armas; We Rose Up / Juan Tuyuc, Yolanda Colom, and Lucía; Communiqué / Otto René Castillo; Declaration of Iximché / Various Authors; An Indian Dawn / Carlota McAllisterPart VI Intent to DestroyThunder in the City / Mario Payeras; The San Francisco Massacre, July 1982 / Ricardo Falla; We Cannot Confirm Nor Deny / United States Embassy; Acts of Genocide / Commission for Historical Clarification; Exodus / Victor Montejo; The Oil Lamp / Antonio L. Cota García; Arbitrary Power and Sexual Violence / Matilde González Izás; Surviving / Recovery of Historical Memory Project; Inverting Clauswitz / Guatemalan Army High Command; Assistance and Control / Myrna Mack; We Are Civilians / Communities of the Population in Resistance of the Sierra; Time to Get Up / Francisco GoldmanPart VII: An Unsettled PeaceRight to Return / María García Hernández, Mama Maquín; What is Reconciliation? / Helen Mack; Promised the Earth / Gustavo Palma Murga; Disagreement / Ana María Rodas; The Atrocity Files / Kate Doyle; Memory of an Angel / Daniel Hernández-Salazar; A Good Place to Commit Murder / Philip Alston, United Nations Special Rapporteur; The Untouchable Narco-State / Frank Smyth; Filóchofo / José Manuel Chacón; Art and the Postwar Generation / Anabella Acevedo; I Walk Backwards / Humberto Ak’abalPart VIII: Maya MovementsThe K’iche’ Language / Adrián Inés Chávez; Our History is a Living History / Rigoberta Menchú Tum; The Pan-Maya Movement / Demetrio Cojtí Cuxil; The Authorized Indian / Charles R. Hale; Transnationalism and Maya Dress / Irma Alicia Velásquez Nimatuj; Mayanization and Everyday Life / Santiago Bastos, Aura Cumes and Leslie Lemus; Solidarity is a Characteristic of the Maya People / Dominga Vásquez; Back to Iximché / III Continental Summit of Indigenous Nations and Pueblos of Abya YalaPart IX: The Sixth CenturyA Modern Faith / Julio Zadik; Spiritual Warfare / Harold Caballeros; God’s Pristine Sound / Meyer Sound Laboratories; The New Face of Labor and Capital / Corey Mattson and Marie Ayer; Pollo Campero Takes Wing / Nation’s Restaurant News; The New Men of Maize / James Klepek; For Sale / Real Estate Advertisement; Death by Deportation / Greg Campbell; I Feel Enraged / Robin Christine Reineke; Prayer for a Migrant / Petrona; Architecture of Remittances; Visits to Chacash / as told to Yolanda Edelmira Figueroa Granados, Cecilia Lilian Alonso Granados, and Antonio Ariel Herrera Alvarado; Maya of Morganton / Leon Fink; Full Moon / Jessica Masaya; Keep on Keeping On / Yolanda Colom, interviewed by Isabel Recinos Arenas; Orgullo Gay / José Manuel Mayorga; Word Play / Isabel de los Angeles Ruano, with photographs by Fotokids/Fundación de Niños ArtistasSuggestions for Further Reading; Acknowledgments of Copyright and Sources; Index

Recenzii

“The Guatemala Reader is captivating both because Guatemalan history is so compelling, and because the editors have done a fantastic job of choosing the texts and images to include. Their selections offer great variety in terms of vision, perspective, and genre, and their introductions to those pieces are uniformly superb.” Steve Striffler, co-editor of The Ecuador Reader

“I wish that I had found a book like this one thirty years ago, when I first came to Guatemala. This reader is a fresh and exciting constellation of documents, essays, investigations, real voices, and compelling visuals, its depth as multilayered as Guatemala itself. Anyone curious about the fascinating and complex land, the most populous in Central America, will find an incomparable introduction in The Guatemala Reader. Others will keep the collection close for reference and the sheer joy of reading.” Mary Jo McConahay, author of Maya Roads: One Woman’s Journey Among the People of the Rainforest

“This excellent and comprehensive collection of historical and contemporary materials about Guatemala is a seminal addition to the literature. It is brilliantly put together, and it will be useful not only as an introduction for students but also as a reference source for scholars.”--Beatriz Manz, author of Paradise in Ashes: A Guatemalan Journey of Courage, Terror, and Hope

“A lively, literate sourcebook on the politics, economy and society of Guatemala, with selections ranging from historical accounts to newspaper articles, essays, memoir excerpts and modern analysis. A volume the excellent series of Latin American Readers, aimed at students, travelers and scholars.” —Longitude: Recommended Reading for Travelers

“With an appeal to travelers, students, and scholars, The Guatemala Reader is a useful volume. As an introduction to the country and its people, it drives home some of the stark realities behind its beautiful facade.”—Ralph Lee Woodward, The Latin Americanist


"The Guatemala Reader is captivating both because Guatemalan history is so compelling, and because the editors have done a fantastic job of choosing the texts and images to include. Their selections offer great variety in terms of vision, perspective, and genre, and their introductions to those pieces are uniformly superb." Steve Striffler, co-editor of The Ecuador Reader "I wish that I had found a book like this one thirty years ago, when I first came to Guatemala. This reader is a fresh and exciting constellation of documents, essays, investigations, real voices, and compelling visuals, its depth as multilayered as Guatemala itself. Anyone curious about the fascinating and complex land, the most populous in Central America, will find an incomparable introduction in The Guatemala Reader. Others will keep the collection close for reference and the sheer joy of reading." Mary Jo McConahay, author of Maya Roads: One Woman's Journey Among the People of the Rainforest "This excellent and comprehensive collection of historical and contemporary materials about Guatemala is a seminal addition to the literature. It is brilliantly put together, and it will be useful not only as an introduction for students but also as a reference source for scholars."--Beatriz Manz, author of Paradise in Ashes: A Guatemalan Journey of Courage, Terror, and Hope "A lively, literate sourcebook on the politics, economy and society of Guatemala, with selections ranging from historical accounts to newspaper articles, essays, memoir excerpts and modern analysis. A volume the excellent series of Latin American Readers, aimed at students, travelers and scholars." - Longitude: Recommended Reading for Travelers "With an appeal to travelers, students, and scholars, The Guatemala Reader is a useful volume. As an introduction to the country and its people, it drives home some of the stark realities behind its beautiful facade." - Ralph Lee Woodward, The Latin Americanist

Notă biografică

Greg Grandin is Professor of History at New York University and a member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. He is the author of "Fordlandia: The Rise and Fall of Henry Ford's Forgotten Jungle City," a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize in History.Deborah T. Levenson is Associate Professor of History at Boston College and the author of "Trade Unionists against Terror: Guatemala City, 1954-1985" and "Adios Nino: Political Violence and the Gangs of Guatemala City," forthcoming from Duke University Press.Elizabeth Oglesby is Associate Professor of Geography and Latin American Studies at the University of Arizona. She previously worked as the editor of "Central America Report" and the associate editor for "NACLA Report on the Americas."

Descriere

Brings together more than 200 texts and images in a broad introduction to Guatemala’s history, culture, and politics