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January 9, 2023
“Bones are always joined to grief, memory, and ritual,” contends anthropologist Hagerty in this searing report on the grueling labor and psychological stress of her time in Guatemala and Argentina excavating the mass graves of victims of political violence. Digging into the history of the two countries, the author discusses the Guatemalan government’s massacre of tens of thousands of Maya people from the 1960s to 1996 and the Argentine military dictatorship’s murder of dissidents from 1976 to 1983. She describes using DNA, oral histories, and fragments of clothing to identify victims and return the remains to families, noting that community members can sometimes recognize a body by the unique pattern on a handwoven huipil, a kind of traditional blouse. “To recognize a missing person in a bone is a difficult act of imagination,” she muses, telling the story of a woman who struggled to make sense of her brother’s death after a fragment of his pelvic bone was found in a mass grave. Hagerty never loses sight of the humanity of the dead and the pain felt by the survivors, nimbly weaving together political history and personal narratives to illuminate the difficult process of accounting for atrocities. Intense and emotional, this is a vital rumination on political violence.
June 10, 2024
Anthropologist Hagerty (Univ. of Cambridge) details her field experiences in Guatemala and Argentina, where she worked alongside forensic teams and victims' families to recover evidence of genocide. Narrator Rose Akroyd's impassioned performance captures the respect for the process of locating and exhuming victims' bones, the steps for cleaning and inspecting the remains, the care taken to identify each victim, and the emotional return of bones for proper inhumation, per local burial traditions. Akroyd projects a clinical objectivity when discussing the political histories of both countries and the various methods each used when executing the victims and disposing of their bodies. Her tone shifts to frustration when describing experiences of bureaucratic and local impediments that slowed the progress of the projects. Akroyd's Spanish pronunciations are adept, but listeners may sense a disconnect as they hear her British-accented narration of the American Hagerty's inner thoughts and feelings. Additionally, listeners should be prepared to hear British pronunciations throughout, even for the word "junta," which is pronounced as "JUN-tuh," as is the standard UK style. VERDICT Hagerty's illuminating account provides a fascinating and deeply moving glimpse into how anthropologists' use of forensic methods has changed the ways in which research is conducted in the field.--Stephanie Bange
Copyright 2024 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.
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