Orner & Lyon — Lavil: Chapter/Testimony Notes Source note: → orner lyon lavil port au prince
Curated Interpretationstudio1804 Research — Scholarly Apparatusfr
Original document
No original document available
2 passages · Use Ctrl+F to searchPrimary
OCR transcription
Orner & Lyon — Lavil: Chapter/Testimony Notes Source note: → orner lyon lavil port au prince
Machine OCR; verify against the facsimile for citations.
Orner & Lyon — Lavil: Chapter/Testimony Notes Source note: → orner lyon lavil port au prince Foreword Notes (Edwidge Danticat, pp. 11–14) Danticat opens on the feast of Corpus Christi in Port-au-Prince — a procession circling a makeshift displacement camp. Her six-year-old U.S.-born daughter, returning for the first time since the earthquake, says: "I thought everything was broken." Danticat's portrait of the city:
Built for 200,0, home to more than 2 million
"The republic of Port-au-Prince" — even those who want decentralization speak of building an improved Port-au-Prince
A city of contradictions: a restaurant charging $20 for a steak stands inches from starvation; the dead can lie in a morgue for weeks while families clamor for burial money
City of music: vendors singing, konpa from tap taps, hymns from Protestant revivals, drums from Vodou temples
City of tremors, visible and invisible: "Traumas are sometimes as visible as amputated limbs in Port-au-Prince and sometimes they linger deep beneath the surface, like phantom limbs."
Key framing line: "This book is filled with narratives of seen and unseen scars.
Private Beta
Full access requires sign-in
rasin.ai is in private beta. Sign in to read the full transcription, summaries, claims, and entities for this document.