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Tiananmen Follies
Cód:
491_9781788690676
“I love freedom and I will long for the freedom of the soul and the dignity of being a human being for the rest of my life. I’m not the first nor am I the last to suffer or even to sacrifice a life to that idea. Prior to my imprisonment, I didn’t try to curry favor, and now that I am in prison I don’t intend to beg for mercy—both of which to me are acts more painful than being imprisoned or dying in prison.”— From Dai Qing’s “Last Words”, scribbled in the hope that someone in the future would read her last thoughts, after she was told she was on a list of prisoners slated for execution.The prison writings of Dai Qing, China’s best-known investigative journalist and environmentalist, offer insight into the mental and physical tribulations that accompany imprisonment by an authoritarian government devoted to squeezing out “confessions” of wrongdoing by its political opponents. Written in during her incarceration in Beijing’s notorious Qingcheng prison, this is a spirited and courageous (and at times mournful) set of writings recounting her struggle with the travails of imprisonment for unstated “crimes” following the 1989 crackdown in Tiananmen Square.Along with articles written from prison looking back upon and analyzing the Tiananmen movement, and fascinating diary entries about prison life, the book contains verbatim translations of Dai’s forced “confessions” to her jailers. In these “confessions”, with her life in the balance, she alternates between ironically praising the Party in its own language—surreptitiously poking fun at it—and forceful defenses of her views and her right to free expression. As she boldly writes in these “confessions”: “My major concern was in demonstrating the courage of intellectuals to speak out and criticize. … I believe that, for scholars and artists, there should be no ideo
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