The sorrows of Mexico An indictment of their country's failings by seven exceptional writers

Book - 2017

"With contributions from seven of Mexico's finest journalists, this is reportage at its bravest and most necessary - it has the power to change the world's view of their country, and by the force of its truth, to start to heal the country's many sorrows. Supported the Arts Council Grant's for the Arts Programme and by PEN Promotes. Veering between carnival and apocalypse, Mexico has in the last ten years become the epicentre of the international drug trade. The so-called "war on drugs" has been a brutal and chaotic failure (more than 160,000 lives have been lost). The drug cartels and the forces of law and order are often in collusion, corruption is everywhere. Life is cheap and inconvenient people - the p...oor, the unlucky, the honest or the inquisitive - can be "disappeared" leaving not a trace behind (in September 2015, more than 26,798 were officially registered as "not located"). Yet people in all walks of life have refused to give up. Diego Enrique Osorno and Juan Villoro tell stories of teenage prostitution and Mexico's street children. Anabel Hernández and Emiliano Ruiz Parra give chilling accounts of the "disappearance" of forty-three students and the murder of a self-educated land lawyer. Sergio González Rodríguez and Marcela Turati dissect the impact of the violence on the victims and those left behind, while Lydia Cacho contributes a journal of what it is like to live every day of your life under threat of death. Reading these accounts we begin to understand the true nature of the meltdown of democracy, obscured by lurid headlines, and the sheer physical and intellectual courage needed to oppose it."--Amazon.com.

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Subjects
Published
London : MacLehose Press 2017.
Language
English
Other Authors
Lydia Cacho, 1963- (author), Sergio González Rodríguez, Anabel Hernández, Diego Enrique Osorno, 1980-, Emiliano Ruiz Parra, Marcela Turati, 1974-, Juan Villoro, 1956-
Item Description
Originally published: 2016.
Physical Description
1 volume : maps (black and white) ; 20 cm
Awards
English Pen Award.
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references.
ISBN
9780857056221
  • Preface / Elena Poniatowska
  • Introduction / Felipe Restrepo Pombo
  • New manifesto of infrarealist journalism / Diego Enrique Osorno
  • I Outrage
  • Collateral damage - living in Mexico / Juan Villoro
  • Lily sings like a little bird / Diego Enrique Osorno
  • The wreck of the tangerines / Emiliano Ruiz Parra
  • The hours of extermination
  • Anabel Hernández
  • I'm the guilty one / Diego Enrique Osorno
  • II Impact
  • Anamorphosis of a victim
  • Sergio González Rodríguez
  • In the dungeons of the Mexican Government Anabel Hernández
  • The country of mass graves
  • Marcela Turati
  • Fragments from a reporter's journal / Lydia Cacho
  • III - Making a stand
  • III Making a Stand
  • The dream of Jesús Fragoso / Emiliano Ruiz Parra
  • War made me a feminist / Marcela Turati
  • Mexico - return to the abyss / Sergio González Rodríguez
  • Street children / Juan Villoro.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

A steely band of courageous Mexican journalists respond to the violence and corruption overwhelming their countryto great personal and professional peril.In a series of elucidating and chilling dispatches, expertly translated by a variety of translators, seven well-respected journalists reveal Mexico's "suppurating wound," as described by Elena Poniatowska in the powerful preface. Each of the pieces in this work shows an absolute assault on justice and human rights: narcotics trafficking, organized crime, sex trafficking, femicide, violent peasant land struggles, disappeared youth, egregious government coverups, torture, and widespread murder. A recent haunting crime that overshadows several of these dispatches is the Sept. 26, 2014, abduction and disappearance of 43 students on their way to Ayotzinapa Rural Teachers' College in Guerrero, one of the most violent narcotics trafficking states in Mexico. In "Collateral DamageLiving in Mexico," Juan Villoro, a weekly columnist for Reforma, chronicles the horrendous violence that has overwhelmed the country since President Felipe Caldern's disastrous war on drug trafficking began in 2006. "The problemhad been around for a long time," he writes. "But the strategy failed. We were sitting on dynamite and Caldern lit a match to prove it." In a developing country like Mexico, where a handful of families control the wealth, there is little opportunity for youth to advance outside the cartels, which provide what Villoro calls a sense of "identity and shared codes." The crimes these journalists delineate seem to have no rhyme or reason save desperation and povertye.g., the young women pressed into sex slavery by boyfriends, documented by Diego Enrique Osorno in "Lily Sings Like a Little Bird." Marcela Turati's "War Made Me a Feminist" is a heart-rending look at how the violence has devastated women, mothers especially. With a recorded 94 journalists murdered in Mexico between 2000 and 2016 (documented in an appendix), the country has become one of the deadliest places to practice that profession.Though brief, this collection of urgent reports deserves a wide audienceand not just in Mexico. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.