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Survivors in Mexico, by Rebecca West
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A travelogue and historical exploration of Mexico from one of the twentieth century’s greatest travel writers
Dame Rebecca West travels through Mexico and explores its people, history, religion, and culture in her unfinished work Survivors in Mexico, carefully stitched together by Bernard Schweizer in this posthumously published edition. West tackles the country’s broad historical legacy—the Spanish conquest and Mexican revolution, the muralist movement, race relations, and contemporary life—and delves into the personal, intimate lives of key figures such as Hernán Cortés, Montezuma, Dr. Atl, Diego Rivera, and Leon Trotsky. Conceived as a companion to West’s masterful classic Black Lamb and Grey Falcon, this book showcases the complexity of West’s character, addresses the paradoxes inherent in her work, and allows for a mature understanding of her ideology. This ebook features an illustrated biography of Rebecca West featuring rare photos and never-before-seen documents from the Department of Special Collections and University Archives, McFarlin Library, at the University of Tulsa.
- Sales Rank: #1224944 in eBooks
- Published on: 2011-03-01
- Released on: 2011-03-01
- Format: Kindle eBook
Review
“The stream of thought about everything from the Conquest to housing in the capital is as rich a treasure as the last Aztec emperor’s could have been.” —The New York Times “Survivors in Mexico is an astonishingly fertile book, full of sharp impressions and stimulating insights, whether West is pondering the question of why miners have been among the most mistreated of all laborers or speculating about the social and political effects of the Aztecs’ lack of domesticated animals. . . . West’s deeply personal take on Mexico is ultimately a meditation on the meaning of life itself.”—Los Angeles Times
About the Author
Dame Rebecca West (1892–1983) is one of the most critically acclaimed and bestselling English novelists, journalists, and literary critics of the twentieth century. In her eleven novels, beginning with The Return of the Soldier, she delved into the psychological landscape of her characters and explored topics including feminism, socialism, love, betrayal, and identity. She was lauded for her wit and intellectual acuity, evident in her prolific journalistic works such as her coverage of the Nuremberg trials for the New Yorker, published as A Train of Powder, and Black Lamb and Grey Falcon, her epic study of Yugoslavia and its people. She had a child with H.G. Wells, but married banker Henry Maxwell Andrews later in life and continued writing until she died in London at age ninety.
Most helpful customer reviews
27 of 32 people found the following review helpful.
Posthumous Births, the Fiesta of Gloria and Other Tall Tales
By Veronica Albin
Survivors is a delightful read full of incisive observations made by a brilliant woman. It is also splendidly organized by its editor, Professor Bernard Schweizer. It is simply that its historical content and other factual, cultural, onomastic and toponymic information cannot be trusted. Please do not get me wrong. I'm thankful to Dr Schweizer for bringing this book to print, and it is a good book in spite of its idiosyncracies and flaws. However, as a Mexican whose historian mother hammered down Zumárraga, I couldn't overlook the spelling of the good padre's name. Likewise, I had breakfast daily next to Xipe Totec, a prominent member of my family's pre-Columbian art collection, and a Dr. Atl painting hung in my room. In addition, I am the granddaughter of a Mexican intellectual and cabinet minister partially responsible for the anti-clerical legislation Mexico is known for (and whose Ph.D. disertation mentor at Columbia was John Dewey, the same man who headed the inquest into Trotsky's treason trial in NY). Also, it was Amalia Hern?ndez (not someone called Eva, as West states and Schweizer lets stand), who was the artistic director and overall genius behind the Ballet Folcl?rico and who really, really and avidly pursued my eligible bachelor Dad in their salad days. And to top it all off, my childhood friend was Nora Volkow, daughter of Seva Volkow Bronstein, whom I felt betrayed by this book, so I felt I had to write this review.
In the Introduction, Schweizer states: "... I have silently corrected obvious grammatical mistakes, rectified factual errors, and introduced more consistent punctuation. I have further added accent marks to reflect contemporary spelling of Spanish names: Zummaraga is spelled Zummáraga, [sic] for instance, Cortes is Cortés, and so on." For all of the editor's good intentions, there are several spelling mistakes (Zummáraga should be spelled Zumárraga; Chulela, Cholula; Xochomilco, Xochimilco; Xipe Toltec, Xipe Totec, inter alia) and even though the editor did well in adding diacritics, their use is not consistent across the text. Unfortunately, in spite of the editor's efforts in rectifying factual errors, a good number of them are still to be found.
I came across what at first glance looked like a miracle. On page 96, line 8, West states: "Her [Isabella's] only son died at nineteen and her posthumous son died at birth..." Huh? A woman giving birth posthumously? Shucks! after the only synapse I have left clicked, I knew that this was not a miraculous birth, just a case of sloppy writing. What West tried to say was that Prince Juan died when his wife Marguerite was pregnant, and then the baby (his, not his Mom's) died soon after birth.
I kept on reading: "...of her four daughters one died in childbirth and the child survived only a couple of years, another was the insulted first queen of Henry the VIII of England, another was insane." Isabella did have four girls, but West accounts for only three of them: Isabel, Catalina (Catherine) and Juana. For the record, the fourth one was Mar?a, married to her dead sister Isabel's husband, Manuel I of Portugal. With all due respect for the editor, both the mistake and the omission really stared me in the face.
On the chapter on Lev Davidovich Bronstein, whose nom de guerre was Leon Trotsky, West opted for not mentioning this fact. This is a little awkward, for she does mention later in the chapter that it was well-known that Trotsky was Jewish, something one cannot deduce from the pseudonym. Trotsky's assassin is identified in the book as Jacson Mornard, a name no one in Mexico ever used; we know him either as Jacques Mornard or, most commonly, as Ram?n Mercader. But most surprising is that even though West had an informal chat with Trotsky's grandson, she identifies him in the book incorrectly as "Seva Trotsky." His name is Esteban (Seva) Volkow Bronstein (son of Trotsky's eldest daughter Zina). Esteban's second daughter Nora Volkow Fern?ndez is the current director of the National Institute on Drug Abuse in Bethesda, MD. I now think that West never figured out that Trotsky was a pseudonym, and forgort that Seva was a son of a daughter who bore her husband's name.
In the chapter on Chapultepec II West states "A Mexican anti-clerical may spit on the pavement when he sees a priest (nuns he cannot see, for they are forbidden by law)." A little knowledge is a dangerous thing. First of all, from the time of Sor Juana there have always been nuns in Mexico (most of them were involved in education, although there were a few colorful ones, like the erstwhile nuns Catalina de Erauso who dabbled in cattle herding and soldiering, and the Madre Conchita, who dabbled in murder). Second, an anti-clerical person would never be able to spit on the pavement when seeing a priest in Mexico, for he/she would not be able to know that the man was a priest as, by law, clergy could not wear religious garb in public (Cf. Article 130 of the Mexican Constitution of 1917).
Then there's more problems with names. In the chapter on Frida and Diego, West mentions (and Schweizer lets it stand) the "Company of Jesuits," and when speaking about the burning of the effigies of Judas, she claims that they are burned in "...the fiesta of Gloria...". Both West and Schweizer should have availed themselves of a good translator, for La Compa??a de Jes?s is rendered correctly into English as "The Society of Jesus" and "S?bado de Gloria" has no good official name in English(as a translator I have found Easter Saturday, Holy Saturday and Easter Eve), but in simple terms it is the Saturday after Good Friday and before Easter Sunday, but call it what we may, it is most certainly not a fiesta at Gloria's house.
But it must have been at a fiesta in somebody's house where Rebecca West fell prey to the Prince of Xochimilco story. The way the prank works (usually perpetrated by upper class Mexican guys to impress beautiful, gullible, American women) is that you tell the foreigner that your last name, whatever it may be (West was fed Andrada [sic], Cano, Sotelo and Miravalles) proves that you are a direct descendant of Moctezuma and also of Spanish nobility and, as such, you are entitled to use the title of Prince of Xochimilco.
This book is West's experience in the Land of Volcanoes, and reading it made me smile a number of times. It proves my native land and my people were cunning enough to, more often than not, take an exceedingly bright woman for a good long ride. But then again, it is also evidence that an exceedingly bright woman could often manage to see through the many layers we Mexicans try to hide under. This book has horrendous flaws, but I'd still tell you to give it a go.
Verónica Albin
8 of 9 people found the following review helpful.
Travel to Mexico with an Engaging Guide
By A Customer
This book, which is an assemblage of fragments Rebecca West intended to form into a book, but never completed, is a very enjoyable and provocative read. I think we get more insight into the mind of West than into her subject, which is the people and country of Mexico, but since she thinks a lot about the world, and the intersections of history, art, religion, and politics, one comes away having learned a lot. Although some might consider West opinionated, she has an engaging style, and forms judgements only after examining an issue from several angles, so one might disagree with her conclusions, but still enjoy the internal debates she conducts with herself. She dwells on several topics which interest her, including Aztec society, the historical encounter between Cortes and Montezuma, the relationship between native people, Europeans and the mixed culture, and individual historical figures that have lived in or passed through Mexico (Kahlo, Rivera, Trotzky, Zummarago). West seems especially interested in Encounters between very different people and cultures, and what those encounters reveal. This book gives the reader the sense of being present at several occasions, partly with vivid detail, as well as because West has familial connections with some of the individuals, and so can give an insider's view. The introduction is also very interesting, giving a sense of who Rebecca West was, as well as the struggle she faced in trying to write a book that could live up to the success of her earlier book, Black Lamb and Grey Falcon.
7 of 8 people found the following review helpful.
Perfect reading for travel insights into Mexican history and culture.
By Bo K.
West's travelogue is the perfect companion for a non-Mexican visitor to this most wonderful country, as her wit and insight provide a very nice overview of some of the key elements of Mexican culture and history.
West was one of the first to write of Frida Kahlo and Diego Rivera, long before they became the pop culture figures that they are today. Her insights into the concept of Mestizaje are insightful; she sees that it has been to Mexico's benefit and detriment that its society is not merely some variant of Europe and SPain but is instead an entirely new society of both European as well as Pre-columbian/ indigenous social attitudes and mores. Her discussion of the Revolution of the early 20th century is brief but also very telling of the background to that event, and her criticism of the inept US ambassador during that time, HL Wilson, is biting.
West is capable of writing with insight about persons as well as events, notwithstanding that Mexico can be a notoriously difficult country to sound; yet she does so in a fashion that is clear, witty and quite intelligent. She never insults either her reader or the personages about which she writes.
DOn't be put off by reviews which pick holes in West's research or even her spelling. Any errors herein are likely more a result of the difficulty for any non-native person to truly understand and know all that there is about a place. West is not a sloppy or lazy writer by any means. But neither is she a Mexican, and so I think that any intelligent reader will be more than pleased with what they find herein. And of course, this book is not the FINAL word on Mexico and the Mexicans!
Travelogues written by non-natives bring out a special difficulty of writing about places and societies. Those who are native to a place often are blind to much of the Genus Loci, as they have lived in their midst forever; yet their insights can also be deeper, as the spirit is in their bones. An intelligent and perceptive visitor on the other hand can often see behind the daily facades that natives ignore, and thereby arrive at truths which even the natives would be surprised by. West's book here is an admirable mix of both of these, and I recommend this book to all who are interested in learning more about the Mexico that exists away from the sandy beaches and high rise tourist hotels. For example, all the crazy gringos who go to Chapala or San Miguel without speaking the language and without knowing who Juarez, Diaz, Villa or Zapata are, should really read this book. Hopefully, this will inspire more of them to pay a little closer attention during their visits to Mexico profundo.... y mientras estoy en mi casita Queretana, hablando con Dr. Atl de chocolate y las plumas verdes y brillantes del Quetzalcoatl...
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