skygiants: Azula from Avatar: the Last Airbender with her hands on Mai and Ty Lee's shoulders (team hardcore)
You know when you read a novel about historical figures, and you're like, "you know, that was fine, but what I REALLY want now is the detailed biography with quotations and citations and big blank speculative spots where everyone's motivations should be because motivations are locked in people's heads and you can't ever really know them for sure?" Yes.

So I read In the Time of the Butterflies, Julia Alvarez's novel about the incredibly fascinating Mirabal sisters, known as "las mariposas." Three out of four of the Mirabals became involved in the resistance against the Trujillo dictatorship and were murdered by said dictatorship; the date of their death is now the UN-designated International Day for the Elimination of Violence Against Women, although "shot for their role in the Resistance" actually seems to me to be to be one of the more gender-neutral violent deaths available to women. ... that was a very strange sentence, but I think you know what I mean? Anyway it also starts the 16 Days of Activism leading up to Human Rights Day on December 10th, so that's in theme.

Anyway! My point is, I would now like to know ALL ABOUT the Mirabals, but there do not seem to be any nonfiction books available in English that I could discover. And, I mean, the Mirabals are Dominican national heroes, not USian, so it's cool that most of the info about them is in Spanish and has not been translated! It's just also personally frustrating. (But if I'm wrong, and you know of a good resource, please let me know!)

I realize I'm talking a lot about the Mirabals and not a lot about In the Time of the Butterflies as a novel. Which, again ... it was fine! I'm not sure the balance of coming-of-age and domestic drama :: revolutionary activity worked particularly well for me, which is weird, because normally I'm all about balancing the dramatic moments of history with normal human concerns. I don't know, I kept getting this weird sense that Julia Alvarez was somewhat underplaying the actual revolutionary activities and accomplishments of the Mirabals in order to make them more generally relatable? But I have no basis on which to say that because I don't know any of the facts! tl;dr would like the biography.

Profile

skygiants: Princess Tutu, facing darkness with a green light in the distance (Default)
skygiants

June 2025

S M T W T F S
123 45 67
891011121314
15161718192021
22232425262728
2930     

Syndicate

RSS Atom

Most Popular Tags

Page Summary

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags
Page generated Jun. 23rd, 2025 08:15 pm
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios