Becca Rothfeld in The Washington Post:
This anecdote is a fitting beginning for a collection about the many ways that Haiti has been distorted by its translation into the idioms of global power. The original Haiti — the one that existed before France colonized the country in 1697, before the subsequent centuries of economic exploitation, before a series of devastating hurricanes exacerbated by climate change — is no longer accessible. “I am from a place that constantly evokes nostalgia in the people who have seen, lived, and loved it ‘before,’” writes Danticat, who emigrated to America when she was 12. Years later, when the writer and her children were driving through a flooded street full of floating trash in the capital city, Port-au-Prince, she suppressed her desire to shout, “The land might never be pristine again.”
More here.
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