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'68
Translated by
Donald Nicholson-Smith
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Product Details |
Description
On the night of October 2, 1968, there occurred a bloody showdown between student demonstrators and the Mexican government in Tlatelolco Square. At least two hundred students were shot dead and many more were detained. Then the bodies were trucked out, the cobblestones were washed clean. Detainees were held without recourse until 1971.
Official denial of the killing continues even today: In the first week of February 2003, Mexico's Education Secretary Reyes Tamiz ordered a new history textbook that mentions the massacre-Claudia Sierra's History of Mexico: An Analytical Approach-removed from shelves and classrooms. (Public outcry led Tamiz to reverse his decision days later.) No one has yet been held accountable for the official acts of savagery. With provocative, anecdotal, and analytical prose, Taibo claims for history "one more of the many unredeemed and sleepless ghosts that live in our lands." Born in Gijón, Spain, PACO IGNACIO TAIBO II has lived in Mexico City since 1958, when his family fled Spanish fascism. Taibo is a distinguished Mexican historian, professor, journalist, labor activist, and world-renowned writer, widely celebrated for his detective novels. He is president of the AIEP (International Association of Writers of Detective Stories), and is credited with creating the neo-detective genre in Latin America, which he says sprung from the sociopolitical emergencies that characterized the 1960s. A prolific writer, Taibo has published more than fifty books, among them novels, short stories, and essays. His numerous literary honors include two Dashiell Hammett prizes, one Planeta prize for the best historical novel, and the Bancarella Prize for his biography of Che Guevara. DONALD NICHOLSON-SMITH translated Guy Debord's The Society of the Spectacle and Raoul Vaneigem's The Revolution of Everyday Life, among other titles.
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