Rigoberta Menchu and the Story of All Poor Guatemalans Book + PRICE WATCH * Amazon pricing is not included in price watch

Rigoberta Menchu and the Story of All Poor Guatemalans Book

In 1992, a Guatemalan peasant named Rigoberta Menchú received the Nobel Peace Prize for her work in pressing the civil rights claims of her country's indigenous peoples. A decade earlier, her memoir, I, Rigoberta Menchú, had appeared, and it was immediately welcomed in the nascent canon of multicultural literary and anthropological writings that has since become standard in the academy. In that memoir, Menchú gives a highly specific account of the then-ruling military government's war against tribal, rural people, making claims that she held a leadership role in the resistance, the Guerrilla Army of the Poor. In a work certain to incite controversy, Middlebury College anthropologist David Stoll questions the veracity of those claims, interviewing many of the people who appeared in her memoir and offering contrary testimony. "In a peasant society ruled by elders, where girls reaching puberty are kept under close watch, it would be very unusual for a person of her age and gender to play the leadership role she describes," Stoll writes. Neither, he argues, was she monolingual and illiterate, as she claimed to be; her presentation of self as "noble savage," he continues, gave her an unwarranted moral authority when she presented stories that she had heard from others as if she had been a participant. His findings, Stoll notes, do not discount the real violence visited by the Guatemalan government on its subjects, although they certainly might give comfort to apologists of the regime. (Interestingly, he notes, Menchú has since disavowed portions of her memoir as the work of the French anthropologist who recorded them.) --Gregory McNameeRead More

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  • Product Description

    Questions the authenticity of the events portrayed in the Nobel Peace Prize-winning I, Rigoberta Mench

    This book is about a living legend, an orphaned Guatemalan schoolgirl thrust into the role of spokeswoman for a defeated guerrilla movement. Her story about her life, family, and village, published under the title I, Rigoberta Mench, aroused so much sympathy that she won the 1992 Nobel Peace Prize. Like the Ch Guevara legend, the imagery surrounding Rigoberta Mench served the ideological needs of the urban left. Her story also helped shape the assumptions of an era of human rights activism in Guatemala. But what old neighbors say about the violence that destroyed Rigoberta's family and village is different from what appeared in her 1982 autobiography. By comparing her account with those of other violence survivors, this is a book that goes to the heart of contemporary debates over political violence, revolutionary movements, postmodernism, and the ethics of scholarship.

  • 0813336945
  • 9780813336947
  • David Stoll
  • 19 November 1999
  • Westview Press Inc
  • Paperback (Book)
  • 368
  • New edition
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