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OverviewThe 1981 slaughter of more than a thousand civilians around El Mozote, El Salvador, by the country's U.S.-trained army was the largest massacre of the Salvadoran civil war. The story was covered and soon forgotten by the international news media. It was revived in 1993 only when the U.S. government was accused of covering up the incident. Such reportage, argues anthropologist Leigh Binford, sustains the perception that the lives of Third World people are only newsworthy when some great tragedy strikes. He critiques the practices of journalists and human rights organizations for their dehumanizing studies of subjects and victims. Binford suggests that such accounts objectify the people involved through statistical analyses and bureaucratic body counts while the news media sensationalize the motives and personalities of the perpetrators. In relating the story of this tragic event, Binford restores a sense of history and social identity to the fallen people of this Salvadoran village. Drawing on interviews he conducted with El Mozote-area residents, he offers a rich ethnographic and personal account of their lives prior to the tragedy. He provides an overview of the history and culture of the area and tells how such a massacre could have happened, why it was covered up, and why it could happen again. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Leigh BinfordPublisher: University of Arizona Press Imprint: University of Arizona Press Dimensions: Width: 14.70cm , Height: 2.20cm , Length: 23.00cm Weight: 0.454kg ISBN: 9780816516629ISBN 10: 0816516626 Pages: 263 Publication Date: 15 October 1996 Audience: College/higher education , Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Out of Print Availability: In Print ![]() Limited stock is available. It will be ordered for you and shipped pending supplier's limited stock. Table of ContentsReviewsBinford's call for a more humanistic anthropology and a less apathetic world comes across clearly. . . . well written, compelling, and recommended for all those interested in Latin America, anthropological ethics, and human rights. Human Mosaic Binford's book does an admirable job in meticulously reconstructing the events which led up to the massacre. He is intent on making the victims of the massacre real human beings with lives and livelihoods, not an anonymous mass of people. His broader aim is to show how quantifying human rights statistics can dehumanize the victims and desensitize people to what is actually involved. His anthropological study is the most interesting part of the book. Latin American Studies Binford's call for a more humanistic anthropology and a less apathetic world comes across clearly. . . . well written, compelling, and recommended for all those interested in Latin America, anthropological ethics, and human rights. -- Human Mosaic Binford's book does an admirable job in meticulously reconstructing the events which led up to the massacre. He is intent on making the victims of the massacre real human beings with lives and livelihoods, not an anonymous mass of people. His broader aim is to show how quantifying human rights statistics can dehumanize the victims and desensitize people to what is actually involved. His anthropological study is the most interesting part of the book. -- Latin American Studies Binford's call for a more humanistic anthropology and a less apathetic world comes across clearly. . . . well written, compelling, and recommended for all those interested in Latin America, anthropological ethics, and human rights. --Human Mosaic Binford's book does an admirable job in meticulously reconstructing the events which led up to the massacre. He is intent on making the victims of the massacre real human beings with lives and livelihoods, not an anonymous mass of people. His broader aim is to show how quantifying human rights statistics can dehumanize the victims and desensitize people to what is actually involved. His anthropological study is the most interesting part of the book. --Latin American Studies Binford's call for a more humanistic anthropology and a less apathetic world comes across clearly. . . . well written, compelling, and recommended for all those interested in Latin America, anthropological ethics, and human rights. <i>Human Mosaic</i> Binford's book does an admirable job in meticulously reconstructing the events which led up to the massacre. He is intent on making the victims of the massacre real human beings with lives and livelihoods, not an anonymous mass of people. His broader aim is to show how quantifying human rights statistics can dehumanize the victims and desensitize people to what is actually involved. His anthropological study is the most interesting part of the book. <i>Latin American Studies</i> Author InformationLeigh Binford is an associate professor of anthropology at the University of Connecticut. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |