lightreads (
lightreads) wrote2013-08-01 09:37 pm
![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
Entry tags:
A Problem from Hell by Samantha Power

My rating: 4 of 5 stars
Grinding, grueling, exhausting account of a series of genocides and the United States's response – or generally lack thereof.
Other people have criticized this book at length for failing to address the ways the United States was actively complicit in genocidal violence through support of its perpetrators. The criticism is accurate, though I think it's a product of the focus of this book very specifically on passive complicity.
I had read excerpts of this over the years, and I'm glad I finally sat down and went through all of it, cover-to-cover. But this is a first generation book, and now I want the fifth generation, or the seventh generation, if you know what I mean. Because Power spends a lot of time documenting American disinterest in mass death, and some time talking about the reasons, but the reasons are very . . . cerebral. This economic interest, that political exigency, a few general comments about racism.
This book made me think a lot about pain, and being the observer of it. I mean, most of us catch glimpses of indescribable anguish out of the corners of our eyes all the time, but we've developed defensive emotional blinders. But once in a while, someone looks at the newspaper headline that ten thousand other people read and forgot, and that one person is seared. Irrevocably changed just by knowing that five thousand people halfway around the world were "disappeared." I've known some people like that, and worked with them. One of them was the first person to make me read excerpts of this book.
I want the book about those people. And the contextual, psychological, physiological, etc. differences between them and the rest of us. And the book that takes a deeper, more honest look at the psychology of passive complicity, not just its economic logic. Because Power wrote mostly about when and where and who, and left me pretty messed up over why.
View all my reviews
no subject
Yes, after reading this I made a note to go digging through all my old college crap. I took a truly fantastic course on international human rights, and I want to see if I can find the syllabus with all the reading again, because I think I would find it helpful after this book. I remember we read some much more empirical work in a blend of history and sociology that got at some of the questions you're asking.
...Argh, this will involve resurrecting a hard drive, won't it?
no subject
Out of curiosity: in what format do you read books? Do you listen to the audiobook/listen to a computer-synthesized reading of the text/read in Braille/other thing which I have not thought of but I'm certain exists? I've been listening to audiobooks far more than reading lately (my written comprehension is shot right now; not sure if it's medication-induced or what), but the selection of interesting books about politics/international relations/recent global history is making me a bit sad, and I thought you might have recs if you listen to audiobooks. If you read in another format, feel free to disregard the question.
no subject
I used to read a lot in digitized speech -- the artificial voice doing a dsy file (it's the standard markup for making a document navigable when reading by voice). But a few years ago I upgraded handhelds and suddenly proper audio was feasible, so I mostly do that now. I've found it's less mentally tiring, and also much easier to follow human-voiced narration in loud environments like the train, which is where I do my reading. But the problem is I still have piles of TBR in dsy, and it's great stuff, but as you noted, no one has bothered to record it yet. There has been a big push in the past year to record a lot of older scifi and fantasy, which is great. Contemporary nonfiction has a pretty good shot at being recorded, though obviously the more obscure stuff that doesn't get Ny Times buzz is hit and miss. But I've found the back catalog of politics/policy in particular is slim.
My main audiobook sources are Audible (somewhat evil, but damn useful, and the annual plans are quite cost effective), the National Library Service (not sure if you would qualify to be a patron, but if you do, they have an excellent and growing online library), and a third source which I will not mention here, but that I'd be happy to tell you about in pm if you're interested. ...ahem. I also get occasional audiobooks from my local public library -- I think in some cases you can borrow audio by Kindle or otherwise download.
You can be 99% sure that any book I talked about in the last two years has been made into an audiobook by someone, somewhere. But if you want the source on anything, just ask -- I probably remember.