Viewing entries tagged
War

The Management of Savagery / Max Blumenthal / 2019

I picked up this book looking to better understand the history of US intervention in Afghanistan and the Middle East, as well as reactionary and perhaps revolutionary violent resistance against it. In order to contextualize Afghanistan, Blumenthal begins in the Cold War, when the US began arming tribal Islamists, including Al-Qaeda, who were frequently compared to US independence heroes and Star Wars rebels by interventionists. In particular, Blumenthal does a great job disentangling the ways the military industrial complex manipulates the media to sanitize allies, demonize targets, and muddy an admittedly complex terrain to audiences to justify intervention and pull Washington’s purse strings. Inevitably, Blumenthal ends up playing defense for the Assad regime in Syria, pointing out untrue propaganda against his regime, a move his critics see as apologetic but I see as simply nuanced. Blumenthal can be seen as a tankie by some, and that’s probably inevitable for a writer who spends so much time countering hyperbolic US propaganda against its enemy nations, who are of course as flawed and complex as any other nation. I particularly appreciated Blumenthal’s writing on the rise of Alex Jones, who had an early career as a 9/11 truther through documentaries like Loose Change, which I had watched as a middle schooler. I never connected the dots from Loose Change to the Sandy Hook massacre denialism to the rise of Trump. Blumenthal includes a skillful argument about how neocon and neolib US military interventions led to the rise of Trump by destabilizing once functional countries and increasing the amount of terrorism and refugees in Europe. This increase led to a rise in ultranationalism and xenophobia the far right thrives on. As someone who was too young during the 9/11 era and didn’t pay enough attention to the interventionist wars during the Obama era, Blumenthal provided an incisive and clarifying narration of the history I lived.  4/5 

The Shadow King by Maaza Mengiste

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The Shadow King by Maaza Mengiste retrieves the stories of female Ethiopian soldiers fighting against Italian imperialism during the second world war. Frequently overlooked, the resistance in Ethiopia and the contributions of women take center stage here. Brutally so. Be warned, the novel narrates several rape scenes, a gang rape, and an attempted castration. These are all part and parcel of war. As a Salvadoran, war literature like this is particularly seething and really strikes a nerve. While artful, Mengiste doesn’t play down the violence of warfare. The upshot of this is we see how powerful the main women are, how much they overcame, what incredibly difficult decisions they had to make.

The novel follows two women soldiers (Aster and Hirut), Aster’s husband Kidane, a cruel Italian colonel Carlo Fucelli, Fucelli’s Ethiopian sex worker, Haile Selassie, and a Jewish Italian photographer and soldier Ettore Navarro. Navarro’s narrative is especially fraught, as he compromises his ethics following orders as a soldier at the same time as he is coming to terms with his prosecuted Jewish identity in Italy. The novel takes its name from the stand-in king, a literal Haile Selassie lookalike, the Ethiopian military used to inspire citizens to resist after Selassie was forced to flee the country.

Mengiste’s writing is so stunningly poetic that The Shadow King really reminds me of The Iliad. Part of what makes the unbearable traumas Mengiste narrates digestible is the beauty with which she renders it. This is one of the most skilled novels I’ve read in my life. The sort of book that will make an emerging writer question their capabilities with awe.

I highly recommend this book to anyone interested in historical fiction, war literature, African literature, Ethiopian literature.