Cena: |
Želi ovaj predmet: | 1 |
Stanje: | Polovan bez oštećenja |
Garancija: | Ne |
Isporuka: | Pošta CC paket (Pošta) Post Express Lično preuzimanje |
Plaćanje: | Tekući račun (pre slanja)
Lično |
Grad: |
Beograd-Zvezdara, Beograd-Zvezdara |
ISBN: 0520206347
Godina izdanja: 1997
Jezik: Engleski
Autor: Strani
Julie A. Mertus, Jasmina Tesanovic, Habiba Metikos, Rada Boric - The Suitcase: Refugee Voices from Bosnia and Croatia
University of California Press, 1997
238 str.
meki povez
stanje: vrlo dobro
About the Book
The whirlwind of Europe`s longest war in half a century has produced this powerful collection of personal narratives—essays, letters, and poems—from refugees fleeing Bosnia and Croatia. Taking us behind the barrage of media coverage, these stories tell of perseverance, brutality, forced departure, exile, and courage. With startling immediacy and in moving detail, speakers tell of stuffing a few belongings—a handful of photographs, a rock from the garden, a change of clothes—into a suitcase and fleeing their homeland.
Contributors from all ethnic groups and every region of Bosnia and Croatia describe their sense of lost community, memories of those left behind, recollections of town squares that no longer exist, and homes now occupied by neighbors. The editors of The Suitcase, themselves representing the diverse peoples of the region, traveled to camps and temporary homes across the globe to collect these stories. An antidote to apathy, this work moves beyond and outside the vicissitudes of daily politics to portray the human tragedy at the center of present-day Bosnia and Croatia. Probing the intimate losses of countless individuals, it delivers a powerful indictment of injustice, militarism, prejudice, and warfare.
About the Author
Julie Mertus was a Fulbright scholar, human rights activist, and Professor of Law in Bucharest, Romania. She is now Professor of Peace and Conflict Studies at American University. Jasmina Tesanovic is a writer and publisher in Belgrade, Serbia. Habiba Metikos was a lawyer in Sarajevo; she now lives in Canada. Rada Boric is a Director of the Center for Women War Victims in Zagreb, Croatia. Cornel West is Professor of African American Studies at Harvard University and author of Race Matters (1993), among many other books.
Table of Contents
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
FOREWORD
Cornel West
INTRODUCTION
THE SUITCASE
The Journey Out
Dreams of Home
Everyday Refugee Life
Children`s Voices
Starting Life Anew
AFTERWORDS
The ABCs of Exile
Dubravka Ugresic
The Face of Women Refugees
from Muslim Communities:
Algeria to Ex-Yugoslavia
Marieme Helie-Lucas
Beyond the Balkans
judith Mayotte
POSTSCRIPT
This Is Not War Talk
Julze Mertus
NOTES ON CONTRIBUTORS
Reviews
`For four excruciating years, these overwhelmingly civilian victims of bloodthirsty armies have been degraded, dishonored, dislocated, and displaced. And the world has looked at this appalling mistreatment with both horror and complacency. . . . In this unique book we move from the searing headlines about the people to the courageous voices of the people . . . whose will to persist and prevail is so nobly evident.`—Cornel West
`This is a sad, lovely, human, heartwarming book. The urgency, immediacy, and power of these first-hand accounts of pain, suffering, loss, and survival make this a uniquely compelling collection and a testimony to the resilience of the human spirit.`—Mahnaz Afkhami, author of Women in Exile
`These voices bring us close, they make us intimate with the losses of refugees—loved ones killed, connections destroyed, homes and country left behind, pieces of one`s self lost. We touch their grief, pain, the chaos that surrounds them.`—Ervin Staub, author of The Roots of Evil
`There are more than two million displaced people from the war in Bosnia. This collection at last gives a voice to those silent millions. Their stories are moving, harrowing, and faithfully reflected in this authentic work.`—Laura Silber, Balkans Correspondent, Financial Times and co-author of Yugoslavia: Death of a Nation
Nonfiction, History, Memoir, 0520206347