Reviews and Comments

subcutaneous

subcutaneous@bookwyrm.social

Joined 1 year, 8 months ago

Deepening political imaginations.

This link opens in a pop-up window

This Is How We Survive (2019, PM Press) 4 stars

In This Is How We Survive: Revolutionary Mothering, War, and Exile in the 21st Century, …

Glad I read it

4 stars

I'm reviewing this book mainly because barely any reviews came up when I searched for them (promotional blurbs don't count), which is disappointing. There's a lot to talk about, & it deserves serious engagement.

For me, the central portion of the book covers Mai'a's years in Egypt, where she first ended up after getting jailed (with her kid) & kicked out of Palestine by israel, & eventually leaves after basically being harassed out of the loose activist “community” she tried to foster through the revolution. The themes built upon from the chapters about her earlier transnational experiences, of simultaneous solidarity & conflict with others in struggle, state violence & “intracommunal” policing, really come to a head. The constant misogynoir she mentions almost in passing seems to practically reach a fever pitch in Cairo, which she is careful to remind readers is an African city. At some point, my gut reaction …

A revelatory history of how postcolonial African Independence movements were systematically undermined by one nation …

Well-sourced & thorough in the places it covers

4 stars

If you are expecting an overview of CIA activity across the continent, the title's a little misleading as it focuses largely on the Congo (DRC, though it covers some important things in Congo-Brazzaville as well) & Ghana. However, those two countries were very important for the overall continental situation & so many interesting connections are made to other places.

With that caveat, the book is quite thorough & does what it aims to do. It gives background as to what evil shit the CIA was up to, why, & how they did it. There are lots & lots of notes explaining where things come from & clear distinctions are made between stuff that was definitely the CIA, stuff that was probably them, & stuff that wasn't. It rather neatly lays out the Cold War context without—as the CIA did—trying to use it to explain everything. It distinguishes carefully between people …

reviewed Zimbabwe by Masipula Sithole

Zimbabwe (EBook, 2015, Chandiwana Sithole for Rujeko Publishers (Pvt.) Ltd) 4 stars

This book is about the contradictions and infighting that occurred in the Zimbabwe liberation movement …

Important work, limited in scope

4 stars

A very critical & insightful work of political science/organizational theory that explains the internal conflicts among leaders of Zimbabwe's nationalist independence movement through the 1960s & 1970s. The author was a participant & so has important “insider” knowledge.

I shared plenty of quotes that I found helpful, so here are some limitations: • A fairly exclusive focus on the elites. This was presumably by design, but I'm still glad I read a book focused on the grassroots movement before this one & plan to read at least one more. • It's all a bunch of (very violently) squabbling cis men - there's not even a cursory acknowledgment of gender oppression despite the fact that I can only think of one person (Fay Chung) the author mentions at all who was neither a cis man nor one of his relatives. There's default “he” throughout in reference to political actors in the …

The Tupac Amaru Rebellion (2014) 4 stars

The largest rebellion in the history of Spain's American empire--a conflict greater in territory and …

Does what it says on the cover

4 stars

If you're interested in learning about this rebellion, the book will be interesting, & the detail+extensive notes will be helpful. If you're not, this is not one of those books that's Secretly About Something Else & you shouldn't bother.

Essays Against Publishing (EBook) 3 stars

Five essays that form a critique of publishing and call for its abolition in order …

Unsatisfying but straightforward

3 stars

Glad a short book like this exists & hope to find more. Not as analytically incisive as hoped. Not much historical perspective. The u.s.-centrism comes across as unintentional & therefore uncritical. One cool thing is an essay that actually talks practically about how the author runs her press, so it's not entirely polemic & theory. Author's style feels kinda radlib-y overall.

Queen of the Conquered (EBook, 2019, Orbit) 4 stars

On the islands of Hans Lollik, Sigourney Rose was the only survivor when her family …

An intensely violent fantasy / murder mystery

4 stars

This was a very, very violent book - there is a lot of physical, emotional, & sexual violence. I don't feel "gratuitous" is the right word for it, though, especially after reading the interview with the author that was helpfully included in the back of the ebook, because it confirmed they were thinking of the same themes I was while reading. I found it took me some time to get used to the descriptive style, but once I did I was more or less swept into the pace of events. I found the concluding twist to be well-prepared & felt like the scope was appropriately expanded to set up the next book. Let's see how it goes.

A Memory Called Empire (Paperback, 2020, Pan Macmillan) 4 stars

Won the 2020 Hugo for Best Novel. Ambassador Mahit Dzmare is posted far from her …

It was entertaining

No rating

I experienced this as an enjoyable palace intrigue like some other reviewers, but I didn't really find it particularly insightful on "assimilation and language and the seduction and horror of empire" (quote taken from the author's acknowledgments section). It's an interesting world and I'm looking forward to reading the sequel, but I can't say my mind was blown.

Slavery and the numbers game (2003, University of Illinois Press) 4 stars

massive trigger warning for this book (not the review)

4 stars

By way of critiquing the incredibly anti-Black work of Robert Fogel & Stanley Engerman, this book reemphasizes just how devastating and hellish the legal chattel slavery regime was. Probably best "read" by referring to specific sections relevant to an aspect of u.s. slavery of which you're uncertain, or concerned you're being fed lies or justifying propaganda about. Unfortunately explicitly reproduces the u.s.-centrism of anglophone slavery historiography, though that's understandable considering the book being critiqued does the same thing.