Fiction. Latino/Latina Studies. Part political exposé, part literary tour-de-force, SINCHI is a gory exploration of one of the darkest periods in Peru's history. Bartoli skilfully sews Peru's mythological history in with the atrocities of the 1980-1993 guerrilla war between American-funded paramilitaries and the insurgent Sendero Luminoso. Weaving an ambitious historical thread that ties together subjugators and their victims across centuries, Bartoli's narration dances between black humour and ferocious accusation as he relates his own account of a civilisation-shattering violence kept hidden…mehr
Fiction. Latino/Latina Studies. Part political exposé, part literary tour-de-force, SINCHI is a gory exploration of one of the darkest periods in Peru's history. Bartoli skilfully sews Peru's mythological history in with the atrocities of the 1980-1993 guerrilla war between American-funded paramilitaries and the insurgent Sendero Luminoso. Weaving an ambitious historical thread that ties together subjugators and their victims across centuries, Bartoli's narration dances between black humour and ferocious accusation as he relates his own account of a civilisation-shattering violence kept hidden from the public eye. SINCHI is a cry of rage and a damning indictment of power and its abuse.Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Giuseppe Bartoli is a Peruvian-Italian-American poet, novelist, and writer currently residing between Bromley, Kent, and Lima, Peru. An avid world-traveller, he has had the privilege to live in Scotland, England, Peru, Chile, Italy, France, Spain, and Argentina. After a brief stint studying a triple masters in managements in Lyon, Giuseppe returned to the UK and completed an MA in Creative Writing at Kingston University where he is now reading a Creative Writing PhD on the Uruguayan poet Delmira Agustini. Bartoli's poetry collection The Fifth Most Wanted Man was published by Marick Press in Detroit, and the play Los Usos Indebidos del Amor by Editorial Apogeo in Peru.
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