Picture of author.

Sally Belfrage (1936–1994)

Autor(a) de Freedom Summer

7 Works 178 Membros 4 Críticas

About the Author

Inclui os nomes: S. Belfrage, Sally Belfrage

Obras por Sally Belfrage

Freedom Summer (1965) 67 exemplares
Living with War: A Belfast Diary (1987) 35 exemplares
Flowers of Emptiness (1981) 23 exemplares
A room in Moscow (1958) 15 exemplares
The Crack 6 exemplares
A Room in Moscow 1 exemplar

Etiquetado

Conhecimento Comum

Nome legal
Belfrage, Sally Mary Caroline
Data de nascimento
1936-10-04
Data de falecimento
1994-03-14
Sexo
female
Nacionalidade
USA (birth)
Local de nascimento
Hollywood, California, USA
Local de falecimento
London, England, UK
Educação
London School of Economics
Ocupações
journalist
memoirist
Relações
Belfrage, Cedric (father)

Membros

Críticas

I've forgotten this book too although the list for 1995 says I ready it. I think it was a memoir by a British exchange student at Moscow State.
 
Assinalado
athenasowl | 1 outra crítica | Jan 29, 2011 |
The Crack is a book for readers interested in the "Troubles" in Northern Ireland, (or more specifically Belfast) so I should image that plenty of English and Southern Irish readers will go to some lengths to avoid it.
Northern Ireland counts as one of the top "boring" problems because it's complicated, insoluble, seemingly senseless and it's been running for hundreds of years. As Sally Belfrage points out, the Protestants had settled in a Catholic Northern Ireland before the Mayflower sailed for America.

However, the Troubles have some unusual aspects and she gives some statistics towards the end of the book to support this:
- A poll conducted by the Belfast Telegraph in 1986 (the year before she wrote this book) showed that only 21.2% of Catholics favoured a united Ireland, i.e. the majority of northern Catholics don't support what the I.R.A. is supposedly for fighting for.
And -
- According to a Gallup Poll conducted world-wide in the mid 1980's, 39% of the people in Northern Ireland define themselves as "very happy" (compared for example, to 15% of West Germans and Italians and 10% of Japanese). This, is in the midst of what is in effect a long running civil war.

If this isn't puzzling enough, the expected mass emigration from the Troubles, unemployment and lack of opportunity doesn't happen. They can easily obtain British or Irish passports but they don't do it, and the odd few who go to work in Scotland or England miss Belfast and seem to return the first chance they get.

Survival at a basic level is guaranteed by weekly British Social Security payments (the "broo") to Protestant and Catholic alike, including those who are actively trying to destroy the British government, with extra compensation for victims of violence - whoever caused it.

Belfast is a real "tangled bank", with a mass of illogicality and selective blindness to violence, so for 15 of the 16 chapters Belfrage talks and makes friends with many there, recounting their stories and events and presenting things how they are in a complex portrait rather than being judgmental or looking for grand solutions.

Finally as a summary to an excellent but difficult book she has the last chapter, "Living With War", which has to count as one of the most sociologicaly interesting that I have ever read.

She shows Belfast as a cauldron of emotions with the people glorying their tradition, music, fighting easily, constantly talking and visiting, sharing the little they have. Among a constant press of people there are stories and rumours and a pure kind of tribalism transposed to a modern environment.

It's them against us, and the fact that the Catholic and Protestant poor live in an almost identical way doesn't allow socialisation in schools, work or pubs.The separation creates a sort of warlike tension and solidarity in each community with the exaggerated symbolism of marches like the July 12th Orange Day Parade.

It seems to be this excitement and solidarity that turns life into a kind of daily show with reporters buzzing around and everyone getting interviewed - in fact a surprising life of stardom for a small economically depressed region of the British Isles. The British are there like umpires in this strange game. The army stops a real Lebanese style civil war from happening and the Social Security office pays for the family support that allows the unemployed "heroes / hard men" to get on with it.

Belfrage suggests that there is a war feeling without its true realities. She quotes Shakespeare in Coriolanus; " Let me have war say I, it exceeds peace as far as day does night: it's spritely, waking, audible, and full of vent. Peace is a very apoplexy, lethargy, mull'ed, deaf, sleepy insensible ..... and it make men hate one another."
Or more recently Nietzsche; "The man who has renounced war has renounced a grand life". And it's a fact that in northern Ireland there's an inverse relation between the homicide rate and the rate of death by suicide.

This is an interesting view from someone who arrived impartially and got to know these people very well. Nevertheless, the book was published in 1986. Since then the Irish Republic has progressed from being the basket case of Europe to one of it's leading economies. European traditionalism is fading fast and the 9/11 New York terror bombings have stopped American I.R.A. funding in it's tracks.

The Troubles are not so serious as 20 years ago and maybe one way or another Belfast is becoming a more normal sort of European city but it's still a very valuable book.
… (mais)
 
Assinalado
Miro | Jan 5, 2007 |
A picture of the McCarthyism of late 1950's America seen through the eyes of a teenage girl who was deeply and unwillingly involved in it. An marvellous coming of age/ political book showing how a personal memoir can help illuminate historical events.
 
Assinalado
Miro | Sep 6, 2006 |
A 21 year old American woman goes to live in Moscow for 5 months in the late 1950's and writes a wonderful book about Russia and the Russians.
She actively sets out to meet people, and being free of preconceived ideas and a young, attractive and intelligent woman who speaks a bit of Russian (and with a part time job), she gets invited to lots of interesting places. Muscovites from all parts of society are happy to talk to her, and combining this with her open mind and gift for writing gives a very valuable and interesting book. Quite a surprise!… (mais)
 
Assinalado
Miro | 1 outra crítica | Sep 3, 2006 |

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Estatísticas

Obras
7
Membros
178
Popularidade
#120,889
Avaliação
½ 3.6
Críticas
4
ISBN
14

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