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Showing 1 - 6 of
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'An indispensable account' - Sunday Times 'Moving and devastating'
- The Literary Review 'An intimate, highly sensory self-portrait' -
Sunday Telegraph (Five Stars) FIRST MEMOIR ABOUT CHINA'A
'RE-EDUCATION' CAMPS BY A UYGHUR WOMAN Since 2017, one million
Uyghurs have been seized by the Chinese authorities and sent to
're-education' camps, in what the US Government and human rights
groups describe as a genocide. Few have made it out to the West.
One is Gulbahar Haitiwaji. For three years, she endured hundreds of
hours of interrogations, freezing cold, forced sterilisation, and a
programme of de-personalisation meant to destroy her free will and
her memories. This intimate account reveals the long-suppressed
truth about China's gulag. It tells the story of a woman confronted
by an all-powerful state bent on crushing her spirit - and her
battle for freedom and dignity. Extract 'In the camps, the
're-education' process applies the same remorseless method to
destroying all its victims. It starts out by stripping you of your
individuality. It takes away your name, your clothes, your hair.
There is nothing now to distinguish you from anyone else. 'Then the
process takes over your body by subjecting it to a hellish routine:
being forced to repeatedly recite the glories of the Communist
Party for eleven hours a day in a windowless classroom. Falter, and
you are punished. So you keep on saying the same things over and
over again until you can't feel, can't think anymore. You lose all
sense of time. First the hours, then the days.' - Gulbahar
Haitiwaji Reviews 'Gulbahar's memoir is an indispensable account,
which makes vivid the stench of fearful sweat in the cells, the
newly built prison's permanent reek of white pain. It closely
corresponds with other witness statements, giving every indication
of being very reliable. Most impressive is her psychological
honesty.' - John Phipps, Sunday Times 'Huge efforts have been made
to obfuscate the realities of life in the camps (even speaking
openly in Xinjiang about them can lead to incarceration). Although
their existence has been well documented abroad and grudgingly
admitted by the Chinese state, relatively few first-hand accounts
of what actually goes on inside them have emerged. One is Gulbahar
Haitiwaji's moving and devastating How I Survived a Chinese
'Re-education' Camp.' - Roderic Wye, Literary Review 'There follows
an intimate, highly sensory self-portrait, created with the help of
Rozenn Morgat (a journalist with Le Figaro), of an educated woman
passing through a system that appears at turns cruel, paranoid,
capricious and devastatingly effective. It begins with the
confiscation of Haitiwaji's passport and a police interrogation
during which she is shown a photograph of her daughter attending a
Uyghur demonstration in Paris. One of the interrogators starts
bawling at her - "Your daughter's a terrorist!" and before long
Haitiwaji is plunged into a bewildering world of shackles, bunks
and beaten-earth floors; grey gruel and stale bread served up by
deaf-mute cooks selected for their silence; the sounds and smells
of the communal toilet-bucket; and the buzz of security camera
motors as they scan the cell.' ***** - Christopher Harding, Sunday
Telegraph Translated from the French book Rescapee du goulag
chinois (Equateurs), How I Survived a Chinese Reeducation Camp is a
riveting insight into an authoritarian world. A true story, it
reads like a 21st Century version of George Orwell's 1984 set in
modern China.
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Coming Out of My Skin
Jean–baptiste Phou, Edward Gauvin
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R501
R416
Discovery Miles 4 160
Save R85 (17%)
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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A compelling memoir that focuses on the intersectionality of race
and sexuality experienced by a gay Asian immigrant man living in a
white world. Â Born to Chinese-Cambodian parents in France,
Jean-Baptiste Phou has pursued a diverse artistic career since
2008. Through his public views and artistic works, he has focused
mainly on the experiences of Asians in France. Up until now, he’s
always been careful not to raise issues of sexuality—in
particular, his homosexuality. Â In this searing memoir, Phou
faces his fears and shame to examine the role his ethnic origin has
played in the construction of his sexual identity and his romantic
relationships in a predominantly white environment. An astute
observer of the various ways in which his body has been perceived,
Phou explores how these perceptions have shaped his relationship
with himself and others. How does a marginalized person develop
emotionally and build, reclaim, and express their sexuality?
Drawing on various works of history, sociology, gender studies,
literature, and popular culture, Phou sensitively examines various
strategies developed in response to this question. Â Being
gay in a largely straight world is difficult but being Asian within
this sexual minority can be a doubly oppressive experience. Coming
Out of My Skin deftly tackles this challenge and aspires for a
reconciliation that can empower people of sexual and racial
minorities to joyfully inhabit their bodies.
The twenty-first century has witnessed an explosion of speculative
fiction in translation (SFT). Rachel Cordasco examines speculative
fiction published in English translation since 1960, ranging from
Soviet-era fiction to the Arabic-language dystopias that emerged
following the Iraq War. Individual chapters on SFT from Korean,
Czech, Finnish, and eleven other source languages feature an
introduction by an expert in the language's speculative fiction
tradition and its present-day output. Cordasco then breaks down
each chapter by subgenre--including science fiction, fantasy, and
horror--to guide readers toward the kinds of works that most
interest them. Her discussion of available SFT stands alongside an
analysis of how various subgenres emerged and developed in a given
language. She also examines the reasons a given subgenre has been
translated into English. An informative and one-of-a-kind guide,
Out of This World offers readers and scholars alike a tour of
speculative fiction's new globalized era.
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Moving the Palace (MP3 format, CD)
Charif Majdalani; Translated by Edward Gauvin; Read by 1955- Jonathan Davis
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R480
R367
Discovery Miles 3 670
Save R113 (24%)
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Out of stock
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