1114 Options for "B,"
the Required
2nd Course Reading |
|
This page lists the second book required in this
course and describes it in more detail. Choose one book from the
following list, below. Please look over all of these directions
--and see the titles on the entire list--before you choose. (You
may, if you wish, continue to use the book you started, or switch to the
other starting book.) |
2nd Required Reading in Eng 1114, Spring 2018
(8-17)
Directions: For your second reading book in Eng 1114, you may choose to read
another one of the books in the required list of choices in our "Textbooks
& Readings"
web page. Or you may choose
from one of these many books below. (Choose early! Some of the books are
available in the bookstore -- just a few copies each -- and others will have
to be found in the IHCC or other libraries or ordered online.)
To
see full descriptions of the first eight books from which you chose, you may
either return to the "Textbooks
& Readings"
web page, or read their repeated descriptions below.
Here are the steps to use in choosing your book:
There are seven
sections on the long list below, each with a general subject inside of an orange box. These
seven are:
A. GENERAL BOOKS ON WOMEN AS
2ND-CLASS HUMAN BEINGS
B. SLAVERY
C. WOMEN IN WW II HOLOCAUST
D. WOMEN AND OTHER GENOCIDES
E. WOMEN IN THIRD-WORLD
COUNTRIES
F. AFRICAN FEMALE GENITAL
MUTILATION/CIRCUMCISION
G. CHOOSE YOUR OWN OPTION
|
-
Scroll down to
choose one of these seven subject areas.
-
Then look at
the list of books shown there.
-
Which ones most
interest you?
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You may want to
look in several different subject areas before making a choice.
-
Most books have some kind of info about how/where to buy it and what its reading assignment is. For
the book you choose, be sure to pay attention to this info!
-
Get your book
as soon as possible, especially if you order online or
through a library: it may take 2-3 weeks to receive your order.
-
As a reminder, you are allowed to continue reading any of the first
eight
reading books. Or you may choose to read a book not on either list -- in
which case you should see section "G. Choose Your Own Option.
---
A. GENERAL BOOKS ON WOMEN AS 2ND-CLASS HUMAN BEINGS:
Children
and War
edited by James Marten. Available in large (trade) paperbound. 313 pp.,
2002. New York Univ. Press. Reading Level: College. The wide, tall
paper-bound ("trade" size) is cheaper. IHCC Bookstore: 2 copies
available. Libraries and Bookstores in General: Some may have it.
Amazon.com w/credit card: used copies are cheap, but add $4 postage;
allow 2 wks.
Description:
This
is a rigorous, interesting, and well researched set of nineteen essays about
various aspects of children and war, each by a different author. According
to Google Book Search, the book “shows that boys and girls have
routinely contributed to home front war efforts, armies have accepted
under-aged soldiers for centuries, and war-time experiences have always
affected the ways in which grown-up children of war perceive themselves and
their societies. The essays in this collection range from explorations of
childhood during the American Revolution and of the writings of free black
children during the Civil War to children's home front war efforts during
World War II, representations of war and defeat in Japanese children's
magazines, and growing up in war-torn Liberia. Children and War
provides a historical context for two centuries of children's multi-faceted
involvement with war.”
Reading Assignment: This is a somewhat
academic book, but the essays are relatively short. Choose two or three
essays per week – about 20-30 pp. per week. Please read ONLY on chapters
applying to girls, or to girls and boys equally..
---
Girls and Sex:
Navigating the Complicated New Landscape
by Peggy Orenstein
This book was a Time magazine
Top-Ten Book of the Year. It is at a college level of reading, and
perhaps is the most difficult of the books on this list to read--primarily
because it is research oriented. However, it does also have a great many
stories of young women in it. If the subject interests you, it's worth the
work. Amazon.com says, "Drawing
on in-depth interviews with over seventy young women and a wide range of
psychologists, academics, and experts, renowned journalist Peggy Orenstein
goes where most others fear to tread, pulling back the curtain on the hidden
truths, hard lessons, and important possibilities of girls’ sex lives in the
modern world. While the media has focused—often to sensational effect—on the
rise of casual sex and the prevalence of rape on campus, in Girls
and Sex Peggy Orenstein
brings much more to the table. She examines the ways in which porn and all
its sexual myths have seeped into young people’s lives; what it means to be
the “the perfect slut” and why many girls scorn virginity; the complicated
terrain of hookup culture and the unfortunate realities surrounding assault." (See
beginning at
Girls and Sex.)
Reading Assignment:
This
requires concentration, so read about 25-30 pp. per week. Choose any chapter
or chapters that interest you--feel free to jump around in it.
---
The Latehomecomer: A Hmong Family Memoir
by Kao Kalia Yang (now of Minnesota). Reading Level: H.S.-Lower College.
The
wide, tall paper-bound ("trade" size) is reasonably priced. IHCC Library:
1 or more copies available. Libraries and Bookstores in General:
Most in Minnesota will have it. Amazon.com w/credit card: used
copies are cheap, but add $4 postage; allow 2 wks.
Description:
It is hard to decide whether this autobiography should be placed in this
category or in the “Women in Third World Countries” section because Kao’s
book bridges two world—being poor in her Hmong village and refugee camp in
Southeast Asia, and being poor as a schoolgirl and teenager in St. Paul,
Minnesota. In addition, she now speaks from a middle class American
perspective, as she has now graduated from the prestigious Carleton College
in Minnesota and the even more prestigious and famous Columbia University in
New York. According to foxcitiesbookfestival.org, Kao was “born in the Ban
Vinai Thai Refugee Camp in 1980, and then at the age of seven came with her
family to the U.S. She grew up in St. Paul, where she learned to live in two
worlds yet remain distinctly Hmong….
The Latehomecomer
is one
of the first memoirs by a Hmong writer released with national distribution
by a literary press." The story is vibrant—interesting, well told, and
moving in places.
Reading Assignment: This is not a difficult book
to read, so choose any 35-40 pp. per week.
---
Lucky
by Alice Sebold
In this
relatively easy-to-read (but sometimes painful, sad, and angry) nonfiction book, Sebold describes
her own rape and recovery. Reviewers call it "inspirational," even
"exhilarating," "ironic" and "nervy" (Francine Prose, Elle magazine);
"stunningly crafted and unsparing" (Kirkus Reviews); and "gruesome
and strangely enchanting" (Newsday). Newsday adds, "The
quiet
achievement of Sebold's memoir of her rape as a college freshman is that she
handles her subject with the integrity of a journalist and the care of a
survivor." (See the beginning at
Lucky.)
Warning:
If you have gone through something like this yourself, you may not want to
read this book—reading it may be too painful or depressing, and/or you may find it
too difficult to work with it repeatedly by researching the subject and
book.
Reading Assignment: This book is 243 pp. long and
reads easily, like a story. Simply choose any 35-40 pp. each week.
---
Nickel and Dimed—On
(Not) Getting By in America
by Barbara
Ehrenreich
This nonfiction
book is about a female journalist trying to live on low-paying jobs across
America to see what it is like. It
highlights how America’s poor are not getting by on their low-paying jobs,
especially when it comes to poor women--of any color. The author “moved from Florida to
Maine to Minnesota, taking the cheapest lodgings available and accepting
work as a waitress, hotel maid, house cleaner, nursing home aide, and
Wal-Mart salesperson” and “soon discovered that even the lowliest”
occupations require exhaustive mental and physical efforts. And one job is
not enough…if you intend to live indoors.” The book “reveals low-wage
America in all its tenacity, anxiety, and surprising generosity.” The
New York Times Book Review says, We have [this author] to thank for
bringing us the news of America’s working poor so clearly…” (Back cover of
book). See the beginning at
Nickel and Dimed.)
Reading
Assignment:
Read the introduction. Then simply choose any 30-35 pp. each week of
reading. (If you wish, you are welcome to start with the introduction and
then read part or all of the Minnesota section first, pp. 121-191).
Reading
Assignment:
Read the introduction. Then simply choose any 30-35 pp. each week of
reading. (If you wish, you are welcome to start with the introduction and
then read part or all of the Minnesota section first, pp. 121-191).
---
Sexual Violence and Armed Conflict
by Janie Leatherman. Reading Level: Upper College and Graduate School.
Polity Press, 2011. 244 pp. with index. IHCC Bookstore: 1 copy
available. Libraries in General: Some may have it. Amazon.com
w/credit card: used copies are cheap, but add $4 postage; allow 2 wks.
Description:
The Journal of Women, Politics and Policy
says, "Because of its clear and accessible style, gripping content,
and intersectional focus, this book should be required reading for scholars
and policy-makers as well as students in a number of different areas. While
it seems targeted at peace and conflict courses, it would also be excellent
in gender studies (clearly introducing gender in the context of armed
conflict), human rights (highlighting women's human rights), and
international relations generally, (addressing the 'new wars')." The
Journal of the American Medical Association
says,
"Using richly detailed case studies, Janie Leatherman's Sexual Violence
and Armed Conflict presents an important examination of sexual violence
in conflict and suggests new ways of conceptualizing and understanding the
complex causes and implications of such violence." Valentine Moghadam,
Purdue University, says, "This is international relations at its best.
Conceptually sophisticated, Janie Leatherman's book elucidates the factors
that lie behind sexual violence in armed conflict: inequalities, structural
injustices, and hyper-masculinity. I recommend it highly."
Reading
Assignment: Briefly glance at the Table of Contents, the “Abbreviations”
on pp. x-xii, and the “Index” starting on p. 225. Then simply choose any
20-25 pp. each week of reading. Each chapter can be read as a separate,
independent essay.
---
Sisters Listening to Sisters by
Peggy Andrews. Reading Level: Upper H.S.-Lower College. Publisher: Bergin &
Garvey.The wide, tall paper-bound ("trade") size is cheapest. IHCC
Bookstore: none. Libraries and Bookstores in General: a few may
have it. Amazon.com w/credit card: used copies are cheap, but add
$4 postage; allow 2 wks. Publisher: Bergin & Garvey. 185 pp.
Description:
The
subtitle of this book is "Women of the World Share Stories of Personal
Empowerment." It has sections on empowerment in the areas of economics,
politics, body and self, and religions. Each section starts with a chapter
introducing the subject and then has four more chapters telling real stories
of women from four geographical areas: Africa, Asia, Latin America, and the
United States.
Reading Assignment: Read any chapters you’d like,
about 20-25 pp. per week.
---
Telling: A Memoir of Rape and Recovery
by Patricia Weaver Francisco. Reading Level: Upper H.S.-Lower College.
Publisher: Cliff Street Book/HarperPerennial. The wide, tall paper-bound
("trade") size is cheapest. IHCC Bookstore: several copies
available. Libraries and Bookstores in General: some will have it.
Amazon.com w/credit card: used copies may be cheap, but add $4
postage; allow 2 wks.
Description:
Patricia Weaver Francisco's book describes her own rape in Minneapolis and
her recovery. Like any survivor of profound violence--she was changed
forever. Weaver, a popular Twin Cities literary and children's author with
a family of her own, moves back and forth between the past and the present,
seeking to understand and account for what was done to her over one
infinitely long nighttime, and how she responded. It is one of the most
personal, real, and direct accounts available by a rape survivor. (Warning:
If you have gone through something like this yourself, you may not want to
read this book—reading it may be too painful and may make it too difficult
to finish it or write about the subject objectively.)
Reading
Assignment: This book is 222 pp. long and reads easily, like a story.
Simply choose any 35-40 pp. each week.
---
The Tenth Parallel
by
Eliza Griswold. Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2010, 317 pp. with Index,
hardcover. IHCC Bookstore: No copies available. Libraries:
Some may have it. Amazon.com w/credit card: It's new, so copies are
in the $20+ range, and add $4 postage; allow 2 wks.
Description:
The
New York Times Book Review calls this a fascinating journey along the
latitude line" of the tenth parallel "in Africa and Asia where Christianity
and Islam often meet and clash.... [F]our-fifths of Muslims live" outside
of the Middle East. The book is "an intimate introduction to some of those
who live in places like Nigeria, Sudan, [and] Somalia...."
Reading
Assignment: Choose any 20-25 pp. each week.
---
B.
MODERN WOMEN IN SLAVERY:
Gaddafi's Harem
by Annick
Cojean. Reading Level: Soph.-Jun. in H.S. Paper/Trade: $13.00 new.
IHCC
Bookstore:
0 copies available. Libraries and Bookstores in General: Many
libraries in particular will have it. Amazon.com w/credit card:
used copies may be cheap, but add $4 postage; allow 2 wks.
Description:
Gaddafi's Harem
is the story in her own voice of a 15-year old who attracts the attention of
the dictator of Libya, who then orders her family to send her to his harem.
The harem is a secret to the Western world, and the practices to which he
subjects his many harem girls and young women are often horrifying. Gaddafi,
a sponsor of a U.S.-recognized terrorist country, Libya, for many years, was
a madman, insane and power hungry, and this autobiography shows the depths
to which he sank in his private bedroom with his harem slaves. The book has
been an international bestseller and winner of international book awards.
Publisher's Weekly calls the story "another level of monstrousness in
the recently overthrown dictatorship of Libya's Muammar Gaddafi,...a moving
and disturbing wake-up call to the personal costs of totalitarianism."
Reading
Assignment:
Read the Prologue. Then simply choose any 30-35 pp. each week of
reading.
---
girl
soldier by Faith J.H. McDonnell and
Grace Akallo. Large paperbound trade book.
This book is about a girl who is kidnapped from a convent and forced to become a
child soldier. The chapters alternate, in turn, between background info of
the political situation in Uganda at that time, and the story as told by the
girl herself, Grace, when she is older and has escaped her captors. There
is Christian commentary in places; however, whether readers are Christian or
not, the background and Grace's stories are accurate retellings of the horribly
violent and infamous Congolese-Ugandan "Lord's Resistance Army" (LRA) of mostly
child soldiers led by its insane commander, Joseph Kony. Kony, for close
to two decades, has variously styled himself a spokesperson for God, the
reincarnation of Jesus, and a medium for thirteen spirits. He has been
responsible for creating over 60,000 child soldiers and sex slaves and the
displacement of over a million Africans from their villages. Reading Assignment--this
is easy reading, and about 15% of the book is pictures and white space on pages,
so read the following: 1st wk.: pp. 5-51 and carefully examine the map;
2nd wk.:, pp. 52-100; 3rd wk.: 100-148; 4th wk.: 148-195.
(Pp. 196-226 are call-to-action/advocacy pages that are not required but may
be read as extra credit.)
---
Princess—A True Story of Life Behind
the Veil in Saudi Arabia
by Jean Sasson. Reading Level: H.S./Low College. Windsor-Brooke Books,
2004. IHCC Bookstore: 1-2 copies available. Libraries and
Bookstores in General: most larger ones should have a copy.
Amazon.com w/credit card: used copies are cheap, add $4 postage; allow 2
wks.
Description:
Princess,
named as one of “500 Great Books by Women,” was a New York Times
bestseller. People magazine calls it “absolutely riveting and
profoundly sad,” Entertainment Weekly calls it “a chilling story” and
“a vivid account of an air-conditioned nightmare,” and USA Today says
it is “must-reading for anyone interested in human rights.” The author
lived in Saudi Arabia for years and met a Saudi royal, Princess sultana Al-Sa’ud,
who wanted her story told to Westerners. The Princess, born into an
extremely wealthy family, had almost no personal freedoms. The author says
that despite the Princess’ “outward charm and gaiety, [she] was a
woman…inwardly seething at her inability to control her own life.”
Reading Assignment, Simply choose any 35-40 pp. each week.
---
Slave Mende Nazer and Damien Lewis
This is a h.s.
reading-level true story of a very poor, third-world, African child, Nazer,
who tells her story to Lewis. Nazer was, as a young teenager, stolen
from her North African mountain village and sold as a slave, all in very recent times.
This all happens in today's Middle
East, and Nazer even was a slave for the last few years in the very modern,
major European city of London. She proves she is bright and resourceful by
finally escaping her slave-owning family and finding some justice--and the
need for a lot of growth--after her many years of captivity. (See beginning
at
Slave.)
Reading
Assignment:
This is easy reading, so read about 35-40 pages a week. Start at the very
beginning, but feel free to skip forward to the slave raiders' raid on the
village, if you wish, to get to the "good parts" sooner. You may also
skip/skim forward to other parts that you find more interesting, as the book
is too long to finish in three-four weeks at 40 pp./wk.
---
The Slave Next Door by
Kevin Bales and Ron Soodalter. Reading Level: College. (U. Cal. Press,
hardcover, 2009. 268 pp. plus an appendix, notes, and index. IHCC
Bookstore: None. Larger Libraries and Bookstores in General:
Larger libraries may have it. Amazon.com w/credit card: used copies
may be cheap, but add $4 postage; allow 2 wks.
Description:
Most
Americans do not know that there are tens of thousands of enslaved people in
America right now. Some of them are the infamous immigrant sex slaves about
which TV has talked. However, many of them are American-born sex slaves,
and many others are immigrant farm workers held in terrible situations. The
book is informative if somewhat repetitive at times, with
easy-to-choose-from chapters on different forms of American slavery.
Reading
Assignment: Read about 25-35 pp. per week only in chapters relating to
women, or women and men equally.
---
Other Books about Modern Slavery:
Note:
These next three books are not ones I have reviewed but are highly
recommended by Greg Rucka in his well-written novel about this subject, Walking Dead.
- A Crime So Monstrous: Face to Face with
Modern Slavery by E. Benjamin Skinner. Rucka says it
"reveals one of the greatest evils of our time, and our failings in
combating it.'
- Human Trafficking, Human Security, and the
Balkans by H. Richard Friman and Simon Reich.
- Disposable People: New Slavery in the
Global Economy by Kevin Bales. Rucka calls it a
"remarkable book."
---
C.
WOMEN IN WW II HOLOCAUST:
Children of the Flames
by
Lucette Matalon Lagnado and Sheila Cohn Dekel. Reading Level: H.S./Low
College. Publisher: Penguin. The
wide, tall paper-bound ("trade") size is cheapest. IHCC Bookstore:
a few copies. Libraries and Bookstores in General: Some have it.
Amazon.com w/credit card: used copies may or may not be cheap; add $4
postage; allow 2 wks.
Description:
This
book is about infamous Nazi doctor Josef Mengele, who ran horrible
experiments on Jews in the concentration camp Auschwitz, such as making them
stand in freezing water, cutting out their body organs to see how long it
took them to die, and tortures even worse. The book is a nonfiction
recounting in story form of Mengele and his experiments with twins by a
journalist who interviewed countless subjects and by the wife of one such
subject. It exposes the so-called “scientific” research by Nazis on
concentration camp inmates not only as inhumane but also ineffective and
poorly done.
Reading Assignment: Before starting, look at the eight
pp. of pictures in the middle and glance at the “Dramatis Personae”—list of
people in the book—on pp. 19-22. Then see the “Contents” on p. 17 and read
as follows: Don’t read the “Preface” (unless it’s on your own time).
Wk. 1: “Prologue”-Chap. 1. Wk. 2: Chap. 2. Wk. 3:
Chap. 3. Wk. 4: Chap. 4.
---
Five Chimneys
by Olga Lengyel. Reading Level: H.S./Low College. Publisher: Academy Chicago. The
wide, tall paper-bound ("trade") size is cheapest. Libraries and Bookstores in General: Some have it.
Amazon.com w/credit card: used copies may or may not be cheap; add $4
postage; allow 2 wks.
Description:
Lengyel’s book, subtitled “A Woman Survivor’s True Story of Auschwitz,” is
about how she, a young, beautiful wife of a hospital director, survived
after her family was killed and she was interned in Birchenau and Auschwitz,
two of the most famous Nazi concentration camps. The New Yorker
calls it a surprisingly dispassionate account of life in the Nazi murder
camps…and the mentality of the persons who administered it.” Other
reviewers on the cover call the book “a stark account…vividly articulated,”
“a picture of utter hell,” and “passionate, tormenting.”
Reading Assignment:
Before
starting, look at the “Glossary” in the very back. Then read as follows.
First Week: Chapters I-II. Second Week: Chapters III-VI.
Third Week:
Chapters VII-X. (Fourth Week: Chapters XI-XV.)
---
Hiding in the Open by Sabina
Zimering. Reading Level: H.S./Low College. Publishers: North Star
Press. The wide, tall paper-bound ("trade") size is cheapest. IHCC
Bookstore: a few copies. Libraries and Bookstores in General:
Some may have it. Amazon.com w/credit card: used copies
may be cheap; add $4 postage; allow 2 wks.
Description:
Zimering was a practicing doctor for forty-two years in Minneapolis until
her retirement. She has given a speech at IHCC and talked with some of
our English students afterward, as well. Before, she was a teenager
and Jew during World War II who escaped the Holocaust by pretending to be an
orphaned Polish Catholic girl. She and her sister moved through parts
of Europe, including Germany itself, successfully avoiding capture for six
years. Her story, while lacking the horror of being in a concentration
camp herself, is a vivid story of what it was like to secretly be a hated,
supposedly subhuman person successfully masquerading each day as a
thoughtful, pretty, "master race" girl. This book may also be more
interesting to some because it is by a Minnesotan, a woman, and an obviously
intelligent person who was a practicing physician for many years.
Reading
Assignment: This is not a difficult book to read. Simply choose any 35-40 pp. each week.
----
I Am a
Star—Child of the Holocaust
by Inge Auerbacher. Reading Level: Ages 8-12. Puffin Book, 1993. IHCC
Bookstore: several copies. Libraries and Bookstores in General:
Some have it. Amazon.com w/credit card: used copies may or may not
be cheap; add $4 postage; allow 2 wks.
Description:
I Am a Star
won a Merit of Educational Distinction for its story aimed at young
readers. According to Amazon.com, “Inga Auerbacher's childhood was as happy
and peaceful as any other German child's--until 1942 [when] she and her
parents were…sent to a concentration camp. The Auerbachers defied death for
three years until they were freed. The back cover of the Puffin edition
says, “The Nazis tried to destroy Inge’s life—but they could not break her
spirit. Inge Auerbacher’s childhood was as happy and peaceful as any other
German child’s—until 1942. [B]ecause Inge’s family was Jewish, [they] were
sent to a concentration camp in Czechoslovakia. The Auerbachers defied
death for three years, and were finally freed in 1945. …Auerbacher tells
her family’s harrowing story—and how they carried with them ever after the
strength and courage of will that allowed them to survive.”
Reading
Assignment:
This is a
young reader’s book, easy to read, so it is only good for two weeks’ worth
of reading: the first reading, do the first half of the book; the second
reading, do the second half of the book. It is included here because
in 2013-14, Auerbacher was a speaker at Inver Hills College.
---
The Seamstress: A Memoir of Survival
by Sara (Seren)
Tuvel Bernstein. Reading Level: H.S./Low College. Publisher: Berkley. The
wide, tall paper-bound ("trade") size is cheapest. IHCC Bookstore:
a few copies. Libraries and Bookstores in General: Some have it.
Amazon.com w/credit card: used copies may or may not be cheap; add $4
postage; allow 2 wks.
Description:
As
teenagers, Sara (known then as “Seren”), her sister, and her friends were
taken to Ravensbruck concentration camp, the only Jewish girls there in a
Gentile (non-Jewish) women’s prison camp where many died. Library Journal calls
this account “unpretentious” and “vivid,” and Booklist says, “This
compelling saga is told in a warm and heartfelt manner.” The book is an
account of all of Bernstein’s war years, moving here and there, often
working for Nazis as a seamstress. The assignments below cover primarily
her period in the concentration camp.
Reading Assignment:
Before
starting, look at the picture on p. 1, the two maps just before it, and the
picture on p. 71. Then read as follows: Wk. 1: pp. 195-233. Wk.
2: pp. 234-264. Wk. 3: pp. 265-294 (or any other 30 pp.).
Wk. 4: pp. 295-328 (or any other 30 pp.).
---
D.
WOMEN AND OTHER GENOCIDES:
First They Killed My Father: A Daughter of Cambodia
Remembers by
Loung Ung. Reading Level: H.S./Low College. Publisher: Harper. The
wide, tall paper-bound ("trade") size is cheapest. IHCC Bookstore:
1-2 copies available. Libraries and Bookstores in General: Many have
it. Amazon.com w/credit card: used copies may be cheap; add $4
postage; allow 2 wks.
Description:
The
Denver Post calls this “an important book…a harrowing book, a book you
will read through tears.” In the late 1970’s, after the end of the War in
Vietnam, in next-door Cambodia the ruling party killed about two million
Cambodians, almost a fourth of the population, in one of the most extensive
genocides of modern times. Ung recounts her story of those years, starting
from age five when she and her family lived in the capital and her father
was a privileged, high-ranking government official. Ung’s family had to
flee and disperse with the arrival of Pol Pot’s Khmer Rouge army. Ung was
trained as a child soldier, and her siblings were sent to labor camps.
Reading Assignment: Before starting, look at the picture on the back
cover; the Author’s Note, p. xi; the Family Chart, p. xiii; Map, p. xv; and
pictures, pp. 110-111. Then read any 25 pp./wk.
---
The Devil Came on Horseback - Bearing Witness to the Genocide
in Darfur
by Brian
Steidle and Gretchen Steidle Wallace. Reading Level: H.S./Low College. 230
pp. BBS Public Affairs. The
hardbound is the edition I have; perhaps by now a paper-bound (either in
"trade" size or paperback) is available. IHCC Bookstore: a few
copies available. Open circulation at IHCC Library: 1 copy.
Libraries and Bookstores in General: many will have it. Amazon.com
w/credit card: used copies may be cheap; add $4 postage; allow 2 wks.
Description:
This
2007 book and the documentary movie based on it (which you might also want
to watch for extra credit—if you get it, watch it before starting the book,
if possible), along with Steidle himself, touring the country to talk about
it, have stunned many thousands of people. His sister helped him write it,
and indeed, much of the genocide shown in this book is against women and
children. Genocide continues there now, and there is little that other
countries have been able to do to stop it. Steidle, a former Marine Corps
Captain, was hired after he got out of the Marines to observe the crisis in
Darfur. He was taken aback by what he found, saw, and was allowed to
photograph. The book comes with 20 photographs. And an excellent
documentary film by Steidle shows much more.
Reading Assignment:
Start with the 7-page "Prologue." Then you should pretty much read it in
order, though you can skip over some sections, if you like. The book is
basically a narrative of his time in Darfur, step by step, and reads like a
journal or diary, so it is not difficult to follow. Please read about 30
pp. per week.
---
"A Problem from Hell" - America and
the Age of Genocide
by Samantha
Power. Reading Level: High College/Grad. School. 620 pp. with an Index.
Publisher: Harper Perennial. The wide, tall paperbound ("trade") size is
cheapest. IHCC Bookstore: 2 copies available. Open circulation
at IHCC Library: 2 copies. Libraries and Bookstores in General:
Almost all have it. Amazon.com w/credit card: used copies may be
cheap; add $4 postage; allow 2 wks.
Description (Strongly
Recommended):
This 2002 book has won so many awards that just listing them would take too
much space. The most prestigious is the Pulitzer Prize (the top U.S.
journalism award) for the best nonfiction book of the year. Power, a
foreign policy columnist at Time magazine and a professor at Harvard,
traveled the world researching how genocide develops and why the United
States has chosen not to intervene in the first part of every single
genocide in the past 100 years. Her prose is vivid, her style insistent,
and her facts overwhelming.
Reading Assignment: Start with the
11-page "Preface." Each chapter is about a different genocide in history
and in various parts of the world. It is okay to skip around, choosing
different chapters in any order you want. Read a total of about 20-25 pp.
per week.
---
The Rape of Nanking
by Iris Chang. Reading Level: Low-Medium College. Penguin, 1997. The
wide, tall paper-bound ("trade") size is cheapest. IHCC Bookstore:
2-3 copies available. Libraries and Bookstores in General: many have
it. Amazon.com w/credit card: used copies may be cheap; add $4
postage; allow 2 wks.
Description:
This
book by a female Chinese-American researcher is sensitive to both female and
male suffering in the historically famous rape of Nanking, china. .
Richard Rhodes' review in the New York Times calls this "a powerful,
landmark book, rivteting in its horror." In 1937, the Japanese army invated
Nankin and, in a matter of weeks, systematically raped, tortured, and killed
300,000 Chinese, primarily civilians. This book tells the story from three
different points of view: the Japanese, the Cinese, and some Westerners who
helped save another 300,000 people from similar fates. The book is very
carefully researched yet gripping in its details as it explores the Japanese
militaristic culture that allowed such brutality, the culture of the people
of Nanking, and the heroic efforts by such people as German John Rape, who
some call the "Oskar Schindler of China." Reading Assignment: This is
a longer book, though relatively easy to read. The first week, read pp.
1-22 (Prologue-Chapter 1). After that, choose any 30 pp. to read each week
for two more weeks.
---
The Specter of Genocide - Mass Murder in Historical Perspective
edited by
Gellately and Kiernan. Reading Level: Low-Medium College. Publisher:
Cambridge UP. The wide,
tall paper-bound ("trade") size is cheapest. IHCC Bookstore: none.
Libraries and Bookstores in General: Some may have it.
Amazon.com w/credit card: used copies may be cheap; add $4 postage;
allow 2 wks.
Description:
Specter
is a scholarly collection of interesting, well written, and intelligent
academic essays attempting to define genocide culturally, politically, and
socially. It is an excellent resource for papers written on genocide, with
some essays discussing individual genocides in history and others looking at
several or more. There are seventeen separate essays with bibliographies
and a well done appendix for looking up good quotations for research papers.
To see the list of individual essays in the "Table of Contents" and
list of subjects in the "Appendix," go to
www.amazon.com/gp/reader/0521527503/ref=sib_dp_
pop_toc?ie=UTF8&p=S009#reader-link.
(Note: If you are in Eng 1114 and you have already read this book in Eng
1108 with me or for any other course during the past or present term, you
cannot use this book now for your second reading in Eng 1114.)
Reading Assignment:
Each essay is
about 20-25 pp. Simply choose any one essay each week.
---
E.
WOMEN IN THIRD-WORLD COUNTRIES:
Bite of the Mango
by
Mariatu Kamara and Susan McClelland. Reading level: H.S. Annick Press
Ltd., 2008, 216 pp. IHCC Bookstore: none. Libraries and
Bookstores in General: Some may have it. Amazon.com w/credit card:
used copies are cheap, but add $4 postage; allow 2 wks.
Description:
This
is a very upbeat book, considering the author lost her arms in civil war.
Review from School Library Journal: "Starred Review. Grade 9 Up—Kamara's
account of the atrocities she suffered at the hands of rebel soldiers in
Sierra Leone is both harrowing and hopeful. The young woman [11 years old]
had a typical childhood in her small rural village until she came face to
face with rebels.... [O]ne soldier chopped off...her hands...and left her
for dead. [S]he found her way to a nearby hospital where she was reunited
with her surviving family members. There, the 12-year-old discovered she was
pregnant and was reduced to begging in the streets to keep herself and her
son alive. When journalists arrived to document the horrors of life in her
country...being featured in their stories led to benefactors wanting to find
a way to take her to a country where she could heal.... After landing in
Canada, Kamara found a...surrogate family who encouraged her not only to
obtain an education, but also to share her story with the world. Her
narrative is honest, raw, and powerful. [T]he book sheds light on a plight
of which many people are still unaware.—Kelly McGorray, Glenbard South
High School Library, Glen Ellyn, IL."
Reading Assignment:
Simply choose any 35-40 pp. each week.
---
Child Soldiers: Sierra
Leone's Revolutionary United Front
[RUF] by
Myriam S. Denov. Reading Level: Mid- to Upper College. Cambridge Univ.
Press, 2010, 234 pp. with an index. IHCC Bookstore: 1 copy
available. Libraries: Some may have it. Amazon.com w/credit
card: It's new, so copies are in the $20 range, but add $4 postage;
allow 2 wks.
Description:
This
sociological and psychological portrait of the real lives of child
soldiers--from first capture to gradual reintroduction into
society--successfully reflects their real experiences. The author says,
"This book explores the lives and realities of a group of former child
soldiers in Sierra Leone, both boys and girls, and traces what happened to
these children during and following the 11-year civil war. It attempts to
fill these silences and empty spaces with children's personal stories and
narratives and to put human accounts to the often dehumanizing and
pathologizing wartime imagery that we are so accustomed to consuming through
the media.... While these children are frequently constructed...as either
extreme victims, extreme perpetrators or extreme heroes...in reality, the
lives, experiences and identities of these children fall within the messy,
ambiguous and paradoxical zones of all three, which proves to be one of the
most challenging aspects to contend with in their post-conflict lives..."
(1-2).
Reading Assignment: Choose any 20-25 pp. per wk. that are
about females, or female-male relationships.
---
"A diamond's journey"
(web article, photos, and intro
video)
at
msnbc.msn.com/id/15842546/0.
Reading/listening level: Upper H.S.-Lower College. Publisher/author:
MSNBC. An approximate one-hour web show with an "Intro" 30-sec. video and
eight "chapters," each of which has a photo and a page of text.
Description:
This
article by MSNBC.com offers an overview of how a diamond starts from often
terribly impoverished and even forced-labor and/or child labor conditions
through buyers and traders, often in India, to jewelry stores in America and
Europe. This is an excellent, relatively brief introduction to how the
diamond business works, both the good and the bad of it.
Reading
Assignment: Read this online magazine article to complete one week of
assigned reading.
The Devil that Danced on Water: A Daughter's Quest
by Aminatta Forna. Reading Level: Lower to Mid-college. Publisher:
London--HarperCollins, 2002. The wide, tall paper-bound ("trade") size is
cheapest. IHCC Bookstore: none. Libraries and Bookstores in
General: Some may have it. Amazon.com w/credit card:
used copies are cheap, but add $4 postage; allow 2 wks.
Description:
This
heartbreaking, real-life tragedy from the point of view of a Sierra Leonean
woman—a daughter—tells how her father, a popular politician in Sierra Leone,
became railroaded by the existing administration in the early decades of
Sierra Leone’s independence. Some people love this book. It is a way of
looking at Sierra Leone from the viewpoint of one of the privileged female
members of its own society. Reading Assignment: This is a long book.
Simply choose any 25 pp.each week.
---
Forgotten Girls—Stories of Hope and Courage
(Christian perspective)
by Kay Strom and Michele Rickett. Reading Level: Jr. High-H.S. Libraries
and Bookstores in General: may not be available. Amazon.com w/credit
card: used copies may be cheap, but add $4 postage; allow 2 wks.
Description:
This
book tells the stories of girls from over fifteen mostly third-world
countries who were physically or sexually abused, ignored, or otherwise
treated poorly, and how many of them were helped. The book has a large
number of interesting and useful stories and facts from a Christian
missionary perspective.
Reading Assignment, Simply choose any 40-50
pp.each week.
---
Green Oranges
(on Lion Mountain)
by Dr. Emily Joy ("The Accidental Optimist"). Reading Level: Upper
H.S.-Lower College. Eyes Books, trade paperbound, 2004. 276 with map in
begin. and 3 pp. of history, facts, and figures about Sierra Leone at end.
IHCC Bookstore: no copies available. Libraries and Bookstores in General:
Some have it. Amazon.com w/credit card: Some copies may be cheaper
than the $27 bookstore price, but add $4 for postage; allow 2 wks.
Description:
In this upbeat book, young
Dr. Emily Joy, with a wicked sense of intelligent wit and a becoming lack of
egoism, "leaves behind her comfortable life" as a general practitioner in
York, England and "heads off for two years to a remote hospital in Sierra
Leone. There she finds...no water, no electricity [and] no amputation
saw.... Then the rebels invade! [Her] problems are tiny compared to those
faced by the people of Sierra Leone. If they can remain so optimistic, then
what's [her] excuse?" A review by the Duchess of York says, "Green Oranges
illustrates the tenacity and determination of the people of Sierra Leone."
--Back Cover of Book.
Reading Assignment: This reads quickly, so
please read about 30 pp. per week.
---
Half the Sky
by Nicholas Kristof and Cheryl WuDunn
The authors interview a number of women
throughout poor areas of the world. The result is an award-winning series of
true stories, chapter by chapter, mixed with discussion about them. The book
has an early- to mid-college reading-level. The
stories are about injustices that poor, third-world women have had done to
them, and how they have survived, recovered, and built new lives helping
other women. The authors, who are married, are among the top journalists in
the U.S. They have traveled to several countries to find these true-life
examples of various women in poverty who have pulled themselves up by their
own efforts and with just a little help from outsiders to start. Each
chapter tells the story of one to three new women in a different country or
continent. (See beginning at
Half the Sky.)
Reading Assignment:
This is a college-level series of essays. Its stories and discussion are
"episodic," meaning the book doesn't have a continuous story like four of
the others listed here: each chapter goes to a new location in the world,
and new people. Feel free to jump around in it, choosing whatever chapters
most interest you: read about 25-30 pages per week.
---
I, Rigoberta Menchu—An South
American Indian
Woman in Guatemala
by
Rigoberta Menchu, edited by Elisabeth Burgos-Debray. Reading Level: H.S./Low
College. Verso/New Left Books, 1984. Libraries and Amazon: May be
hard to find, but may be low-priced on Amazon (add $4 postage; allow 2
wks.).
Description:
Rigoberta Menchu is the famous and exemplary female 1992 Nobel Peace
Prizewinner from Guatemala, Central America. She is a Spanish-speaking
Native American who, according to translator Ann Wright, is a “ladino”—“a
person of mixed race or a Spanish-speaking Indian” in a “system which
oppresses the Indian—first under Spanish rule and then under the succession
of brutal governments of the landed oligarchy” (viii). Menchu eventually
helped develop freedom and political democracy for her entire country and
has become an example to all Central and South Americans, to Central and
South American Christian Indians, and to the world.
Reading Assignment,
Simply read, from the beginning, about 35-40 pp.each week. Skipping forward
to later parts of the story is allowable after the first week.
---
Monique and the Mango Rains
by Kris (Kristina) Holloway. Reading Level: Mid-Upper H.S. Publisher:
Waveland Press. The wide, tall paper-bound ("trade") size is cheapest.
IHCC Bookstore: 1-2 copies available. 3-hr. Reserve at Desk of IH
Library: 1 copy. Libraries and Bookstores in General: Some have
it. Amazon.com w/credit card: used copies are cheap, but add $4
postage; allow 2 wks.
Description:
This
2007 book details Kristina (Kris) Holloway's powerful, interesting story of
her two years in the Peace Corps in the West African country of Mali (just
north of Sierra Leone) and the wonderful young village midwife, Monique,
with whom she worked. Top reviewers around the U.S. call the book "tender,
revelatory" (Publishers Weekly); "as compelling as any novel" (Entertainment
Weekly "Pick"); and a "poignant and powerful book" (Kirkus,
Starred Review). Holloway details in interesting, clear prose what it is
like to live in a West African village, be in the Peace Corps, and have
about the best kind of experience possible in such a situation. While the
ending is tragic, it also is uplifting, making the whole an excellent,
heart-warming book.
Reading Assignment: This is a longer book,
though relatively easy to read. Read any 30-40 pp.each week.
---
This Child Will Be Great
by Ellen Johnson Sirleaf. Reading Level: Upper H.S.-College.
Publisher: Harper, 2009. IHCC Bookstore: no
copies available. Libraries and
Bookstores in General: Some have it. Amazon.com w/credit card:
Some copies may be cheaper than the $27 bookstore price, but add $4 for
postage; allow 2 wks.
Description:
This 2009 book tells the story of
the first democratically-elected female president of an African country, Dr.
Ellen Johnson Sirleaf. Born in Liberia, she graduated from the
University of Wisconsin-Madison several years ago, went on to a graduate
degree at Harvard University, and then became an important financial
organizer for the Organization of African States, then the United Nations
and the International Monetary Fund (IMF), and finally - after the terrible
Liberian civil war (which fostered the Sierra Leonean civil war and ran
during the same period of time), she helped reconstruct Liberia. After
two years of reconstruction, she ran for President and was democratically
elected in 2006. She came to the Twin Cities to give a lecture at the
University of Minnesota in April 2009 and to receive an honorary doctorate
in laws from the University. This book is her own memoirs, in which
she recounts how she rose from impossible poverty and, later, imprisonment
during part of the civil war, to ever higher positions of influence and
power, from she has been able to work at her lifetime mission, which is, as
she herself says it, to help the people of Liberia.
Reading Assignment: This is a longer book, though relatively easy to
read. The first week, read pp. 1-22 (Prologue-Chapter 1). After that,
choose any 30 pp. to read per week.
---
F. AFRICAN FEMALE GENITAL MUTILATION/CIRCUMCISION:
Web Pages on Female Genital
Mutilation in Africa:
Reading Level: College. Read/skim all 3 Web pages for just one (or if
you take a lot of time at it, for two) of your weekly assignments. The
book listed below, Warrior Marks, can be read for one, two, or three
weeks of readings.
Warning:
The material sometimes is painful to read and view. However,
female circumcision in most of Africa has a profound, nearly
unfathomable--to other parts of the world--affect on African (and recent
African-immigrant) culture. This set of readings therefore might be appropriate for future nurses
and physicians coming into contact with African immigrants, and it is
especially recommended for anyone who may someday counsel African immigrants.
FIRST ARE THREE
ARTICLES ON FEMALE CIRCUMCISION:
(1)
www.fgmnetwork.org/Lightfoot-klein/prisonersofritual.htm.
"Prisoners of Ritual: Some Contemporary Developments in the History of
Female Genital Mutilation" by Hanny Lightfoot-Klein.
Description:
"This
paper was presented at the Second International Symposium on Circumcision in
San Francisco, April 30-May 3, 1991 . Female genital circumcision is
ubiquitous at all levels of society in many countries of Africa . It is
also practiced, more or less sporadically, in other continents of the world.
In Africa alone, along an uninterrupted belt across the center of the
continent and along the length of the Nile, an estimated 60-90,000,000 women
are circumcised." (5000 w. conference paper).
(2)
http://aappolicy.aappublications.org/cgi/content/full/pediatrics;
102/1/153.
"Female Genital Mutilation." American Academy of Pediatrics,
Committee on Bioethics, Policy Statement. Pediatrics, Vol. 102, No.
1, July 1998, pp. 153-156. "Abstract":
Description:
"The
traditional custom of ritual cutting and alteration of the genitalia of
female infants, girls, and adolescents, referred to as female
genital mutilation (FGM), persists primarily in Africa and among certain
communities in the Middle East and Asia . Immigrants in the
United States from areas where FGM is endemic may have daughters
who have undergone a ritual genital procedure or may request that
such a procedure be performed by a physician…." (2000 w. summary. WARNING:
CONTAINS GRAPHIC DRAWINGS).
(3)
http://www.religioustolerance.org/fem_cirm.htm.
(Viewpoint from Islamic beliefs.) "Female Genital Mutilation (FGM) in
Africa , the Middle East & Far East " by B.A. Robinson.
Description:
"FGM
is a social custom, not a religious practice. However, in those Muslim
countries where it is practiced, FGM is often justified by a controversial
saying attributed to the Prophet Mohammed that seems to favor sunna
circumcision. The authenticity of this saying is unconfirmed, and some
scholars have refuted it. Even if true, it only permits the practice; it
does not mandate it." (1600 w.)
Reading Assignment: Read
all three of these Web articles to complete one week of assigned
reading.
-----------
SECOND IS A
BOOK ABOUT FEMALE CIRCUMCISION BY ONE OF AMERICA'S BEST FEMALE,
AFRICAN-AMERICAN WRITERS:
Warrior Marks by
Alice Walker and Pratibha Parmar. Reading Level: H.S. (but more suitable
for College and Professionals). Publishers: Hardbound--Scribner's;
Softbound--Back Bay Books/Little, Brown. The wide, tall paper-bound ("trade"
size) is cheapest. IHCC Bookstore: No copies. Libraries and
Bookstores in General: Some have it. Amazon.com w/credit card:
Even used copies may be expensive (I paid $30 for mine); add $4 postage;
allow 2 wks.
Description:
Alice
Walker won a Pulitzer Prize for The Color Purple (and the movie made
from it, starring Whoopi Goldberg, won a number of awards). Walker is
considered one of our best American novelists and is a perennial candidate
for the Nobel Prize for Literature. She has studied the subject of female
genital mutilation and, in this nonfiction book, she and journalist Pratibha
Parmar make the subject come alive by interviewing women who have been
circumcised and the older women who perform the "ritual"--almost always on
young girls. Beware: it is difficult to read some of these materials.
Reading Assignment: This book is 374 pp. long and is about the filming
of a documentary video. The back section has interviews with women involved
in female circumcision. Please read the following: 1st Wk.: See
map in front, pictures scattered throughout, and info and chart on female
genitalia pp. on 365-367. Then read first third of pp. 255-350. 2nd Wk.:
Read middle third of pp. 255-350. 3rd Wk.: Read final third of pp.
255-350.
----
G. CHOOSE YOUR OWN OPTION:
The books
above are simply a group of well respected books that I have discovered on
the subject of women as victims. There are many more. If you would like to
suggest a nonfiction book you'd like to read on violence against,
or maltreatment of,
women, I'm open to your suggestions. It must be nonfiction
and of good
quality, directly linked to the subject of women as victims, and at a
reading level of upper-H.S. or college. Please bring it to me and show it
to me so that I can see if it fits well enough into the class.
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