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The Battle For Guatemala: Rebels, Death Squads, And U.s. Power

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A contemporary history of Guatemala's thirty-year civil war—the longest and bloodiest in the hemisphere—this book pulls aside the veil of secrecy that has obscured the origins of the war. Using a structural analysis that takes critical events and changes in the nation's economic and social structure as a starting point for understanding its political crises, the author unravels the contradictions of Guatemalan politics and illustrates why, in the face of unmatched military brutality and repeated U.S. interventions, popular and revolutionary movements have arisen time and again. The central protagonists in the turbulent battle for Guatemala—rebels, death squads, and the United States—are evaluated in a dynamic framework that highlights the role of indigenous peoples and women and underscores the articulation of ethnic and gender divisions with class divisions. This book's interdisciplinary approach differentiates it from others in English and makes it an invaluable case study on the internal dynamics of Third World revolution and counterrevolution as well as on issues of human rights and U.S. policy in Central America.

288 pages, Hardcover

First published September 1, 1991

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Susanne Jonas

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Profile Image for Montana Goodman.
182 reviews10 followers
November 4, 2020
The first part is an excellent summary of the history of Guatemala up to the 1960s or so. The rest reads like a dissertation - long, dense, kind of hard to follow.
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