From Publishers Weekly
If the perpetrators of the 1994 Rwandan genocide interviewed by political science professor Straus are to be believed, virtually none of them acted voluntarily; it was only because their own lives were threatened that they shot, stabbed and bludgeoned to death thousands of Tutsis. The plausibility of their stories is left up to the reader. "The book's purpose," writes Straus, "is not to interpret or analyze... but to present largely unmediated narratives and images." Fair enough. If intended purely as a primary source on the genocide, Straus's text may indeed be useful. It is the book's second section, comprising unremarkable portraits of Rwandans by Lyons, which is more problematic. "I felt that condemning those responsible for the genocide too easily makes them into the 'other,' " writes Lyons, who therefore alternates images of perpetrators with victims to emphasize their similarities. Would such sensitivity to criminals be contemplated if they were not African? Would Lyons present side-by-side photos of Holocaust victims and Nazis? Lynching victims and KKK members? Lyons, in making the point that we are all capable of cruelty, conflates a generalized potential for evil with actual acts of genocide. In the process, he takes moral relativism to a mushy-headed extreme.
(Apr.) Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
From Booklist
Much has been written about the genocide against the Tutsi minority in Rwanda in 1994. This collection of interviews and photographs brings a more intimate dimension to attempts to understand the personal and cultural issues surrounding the genocide, in which neighbor slaughtered neighbor using rudimentary weapons. This collection departs from scholarly analysis and judicial investigations. Between 1998 and 2001, Straus conducted interviews with survivors, perpetrators, and suspects, to allow individuals in their own words--accompanied by their faces and other images--to talk about what happened in the largest genocide campaign in the twentieth century. A farmer who participated in the slaughter characterizes Rwandans as cowlike, unable to resist orders from authorities; an army reservist explains that unless women and children were killed, there would be no complete extermination; a man who killed his brother, who had a Tutsi wife, describes how he was forced, at gunpoint, to commit the murder. The testimony, preceded by only the briefest explanations, is often chilling, and the photos are poignant in this stirring look at the Rwandan genocide.
Vanessa BushCopyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved
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