I’m
not the type of person who reads books related to politics or history or
anything of that sort. In fact I have zero knowledge about the world wars and
stuff like that. The
book Upside Down: A Primer for the Looking-Glass World is not really my thing but recently I went through some portions of it and I found it very impressive and realistic. As
far as I know (thanks to Google and Wikipedia), the book was originally
published in Spanish in 1998, was written by Eduardo Galeano,
a Uruguayan author who was greatly impacted by the political turmoil
during the 20th century military regimes in Latin America.
The ruminations of this book were formed as a result of Galeano's desire to
remember the past traumas and as well as to learn from them. Though focusing on
Latin America, Galeano uses what he has learned from the political and social
environment within Latin America to understand injustices and social dynamics
throughout the rest of the world.
The
twenty pages that I had to read, and tried to comprehend as best as I can,
describe matters which relates to economy, war and injustice in the society and
the developed world. The introductory part states the rewards that the upside
down world provides: scorns honesty, punishes work, prizes lack of scruples and
feeds cannibalism; which, I find very true and relatable. Throughout the pages
one can find statements so powerful that they almost hit you with their iron
fists. For example, as Galeano talks about survival of the fittest, he states
that ‘killer instinct is an essential ingredient for getting ahead’ which is a
fact we witness in almost every political, social and economical scenario.
Talking about the world economy and how it exploits the poor in favor of the
richest, Galeano states that, ‘the world economy is the most efficient
expression of organized crime.’
As
Galeano points out that the worst violators of nature and human rights never go
to jail but they hold the keys, he is mocking the authorities who misuse the
power vested upon them. He also portraits the pathetic situation of human relations
these days as he states that the looking glass world trains us to view our
neighbor as a threat, not as a promise. We recognize ourselves in our differences
and build links based on them. The economy of today’s world is so terrible that
the common man can no longer survive in peace and thus Galeano writes
‘advertising enjoins everyone to consume while the economy prohibits the vast
majority of humanity from doing so.’ He also points how discrimination causes a
sense of hatred in the minds of the unfortunate ones who don’t have their voice
in the society; as he says that ‘the ones who count arise desire and envy among
those of us the market discounts in a world where respect is measured by the
number of credit cards you carry.’ He also says that the mass media informs us
to look at ourselves in a single mirror as he reflects how media shows us what
we are supposed to be and how far we are from that, making us frown at our own
media-made flaws and inefficiencies.
The
disgraceful situation prevails where governments play the smiling villain’s
role as in many countries social justice has been reduced to criminal justice.
Galeano rightfully states that public rights are reduced to public charity and
handed out only on the eve of elections. Along with the government, Galeano
also talks about poverty and how it is portrayed. He says that poverty used to
be the fruit of injustice, now it’s the fair reward for inefficiency, which
shows the attitude of the rich towards the poor as in the reason behind their
poverty is nothing but sheer laziness. He also states that poverty may create pity
but it no longer causes indignation, as people often tend to think that the poor
people ‘deserve’ to be so. Wealth and poverty emerge from eternity and towards
eternity they march, and that’s the way things are because God or customs
prefers it that way.
Moving
on to issues related to drugs, Galeano says that the war on drugs in a cover
for social war. The following points are stated:
- Among the ghosts of international terrorism, narco-terrorism is the one that’s most frightening.
- US Citizens spend $110 on drugs a year
- Drugs make fortunes for the bankers and offer useful pretexts for the machinery of war
- A problem of public health has been turned into a problem of public security that respects no borders
- If imported cocaine were to disappear, in two months it would be replaced by synthetic drugs
- In Brazil and everywhere else, those who die in the war on drugs far outnumber those who die from an overdose
Thus
to conclude, Upside Down presents the relationship between developed (or “first
world”) and developing (or “third world”) nations. Galeano suggests that we can
start to understand our perceptions of power as based from media
interpretations when these "facts" are turned upside down again and
forced to stand on their own, Galeano also challenges the First World, Eurocentric
readers with the question of why Europe and America are always presented on the
top of the world, and why can't Latin America and Australia and Africa be
seen as the top of the world. As globalization continues, the
difference between the rich and the poor of the world just keeps
growing, and with this increased polarization has come a new
vocabulary of degradation to describe class and racial differences. People are
drawn to capitalism with the promise of choice, but as Galeano points out,
those who are allowed to actually make those choices are limited often by
money, gender, and race.
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