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Chapter 6 opens with examination of several reports by informants and agents in the Guatemalan National Police Archive. It discusses the language used and its implications. Then it analyzes the file of president Jacobo Árbenz from YEARS. Next, it studies the over 2,500 pages of José Revueltas’ file found in the Archive of the DFS. Most of the documents refer to Revueltas’ trial after the events of 1968. The chapter discusses the language employed by the agents, how Revueltas’s “responsibility” for the events of 1968 was established, and how surveillance of Revueltas did not end until his death. Subsequently, the chapter scrutinizes the files of Gabriel García Márquez. These files show the ambiguous position held by García Márquez in Mexico—he was described as “guest of honor” and “KGB agent” simultaneously. It discusses the writer’s political views and his silence regarding Mexican state violence.
Chapter 7 reverses the perspective of the previous two chapters and reads several literary works to unearth their dialogue with the State’s surveillance. It begins with the analysis of García Márquez’s The Autumn of the Patriarch, emphasizing the role played by poetry in the novel and how it confronts hegemonic power. It then discusses the short story “The Most Handsomest Drowned Man in the World” and the ambiguity of the sense of liberation in its ending. The chapter then turns to two works by José Revueltas: the short story “Hegel and I,” which deals with the possibilities and limits of knowledge; and the novel “Errors,” which criticizes of the the Mexican Communist Party. The chapter continues with the analysis of several poems by Guatemalan writer and guerrillero Otto René Castillo, focusing on the relation between praxis and theory that all intellectual faces, and the importance of the lover’s gaze in the poetic construction of a new reality. Lastly, it examines the autobiographical text Thunder in the City, written by Mario Payeras . The author evokes his time in the urban guerrilla in the early 1980s in Guatemala City and provides a remarkable view into the State’s surveillance.
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