Fotografía de autor
3 Obras 248 Miembros 12 Reseñas

Sobre El Autor

Suzy Hansen is a contributing writer to The New York Times Magazine and has written for many other publications. In 2007, she was awarded a fellowship from the Institute of Current World Affairs to do research in Turkey. She currently lives in Istanbul. Notes on a Foreign Country is her first book.

Obras de Suzy Hansen

Etiquetado

Conocimiento común

Género
female
Nacionalidad
USA

Miembros

Reseñas

A naive journalist is sent to Turkey and the questions that her interviewees ask her make her realize that everyone knows a lot about Americans, but Americans lack the knowledge of other people's histories, even when Americans changed and molded it... in Greece, Turkey, Egypt, Afghanistan, Pakistan, Iran and many other places.
 
Denunciada
Ricardo_das_Neves | 11 reseñas más. | Jan 14, 2023 |
This book, of course, is not actually a homage to a foreign country. It is about America. It is about Americans. It is obsessed with America's position in the world, and with Americans' toxic naïveté about it.

And if only this was actually a book about Turkey! Hansen presents the story almost as a semi-coming-of-age narrative, where the veil lifts from her eyes and her American delusions of superiority vanish as soon as she learns all the awful Cold War / Neoliberal crap we pulled in the last century. She admits her surprise not only at America's monstrous manipulation of global politics, but also at how saturated the rest of the world is with American economics and culture and physical objects.

But how could any of this be shocking to anyone? Of course Americans are divorced from the actual "boots on the ground". We ship black and Latino soldiers thousands of miles away to fight our needless wars for us while miring ourselves further in our home front capitalist nightmare. We have no clue about what other people and countries and cultures are experiencing -- or at least the vast majority of us don't. And it's really fucked up!

So, yes. I realize now that the reason this book started dragging in the middle is because, by that point, the author had already polished off her most interesting insights -- e.g., the parallel of populations around the world dispossessed by American empire to the alienated American underclass that voted for a populist autocrat -- and left the journalist-takes-on-Istanbul memoir part to dive into what high school students should have learned in their 10th grade history class.
… (más)
 
Denunciada
Gadi_Cohen | 11 reseñas más. | Sep 22, 2021 |
The way Suzy Hansen writes about her discovery of Turkey and specifically Istanbul is truly mesmerizing. She is not ashamed to admit that she didn't know anything about her new home country. Put this together with the vivid descriptions of a failed American foreign policy regarding the Islamic world, and the only conclusion is that this is one of the best works of non fiction you can read.
 
Denunciada
PhilipMertens | 11 reseñas más. | Jun 19, 2021 |
Expansive and specific, readable with flourishes of startling beauty and insight, an honest investigation of Turkey, Greece, the Arab world, and of being an American.
 
Denunciada
jostie13 | 11 reseñas más. | May 14, 2020 |

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Obras
3
Miembros
248
Popularidad
#92,014
Valoración
3.9
Reseñas
12
ISBNs
10
Idiomas
1

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