N.L. Brisson

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The outlandishly brutal actions of America abroad in the 1950s required compensatory rationalizing language, a language equally violent in its distortion. It was a discourse that defined “objectivity”—indeed, “reality”—according to the requirements of American power, and that, as much as in Greece, was created in Latin America.
Notes on a Foreign Country: An American Abroad in a Post-American World
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