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Maxine Greene and the Project of ‘Making the Strange Liberty of Creation Possible’

Chapter

Maxine Greene and the Project of ‘Making the Strange Liberty of Creation Possible’

DOI link for Maxine Greene and the Project of ‘Making the Strange Liberty of Creation Possible’

Maxine Greene and the Project of ‘Making the Strange Liberty of Creation Possible’ book

Maxine Greene and the Project of ‘Making the Strange Liberty of Creation Possible’

DOI link for Maxine Greene and the Project of ‘Making the Strange Liberty of Creation Possible’

Maxine Greene and the Project of ‘Making the Strange Liberty of Creation Possible’ book

ByPaula M. Salvio
BookThe Passionate Mind of Maxine Greene

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Edition 1st Edition
First Published 1998
Imprint Routledge
Pages 23
eBook ISBN 9780203980729

ABSTRACT

The novel Taste of Salt, tells the story of modern Haiti at the time Bertrand Aristide has just been elected president.1 Francis Temple writes this story from the perspective of two teenagers, Djo, one of Aristide’s bodyguards and Jeremie, who is educated in a convent, where she is secluded from the violence continually erupting on the streets of Port au Prince. As the story opens, Djo is lying in a hospital bed weakened from the Macoutes’ bludgeons. His eyes are swollen shut and he is barely able to speak. Aristide has asked Jeremie to sit by Djo’s bedside and offer him what comfort she can. He has also requested that Jeremie tape record Djo’s life story. ‘If I tell my story,’ whispers Djo, ‘I will not die entirely… Titid loves me. Also, Titid is a politician. He knows how to use stories to make things happen, to make the way of the world change’ (Temple, 1992, p. 7). During one of their visits, Djo remembers the following story that inspires his work with Pe Pierre, a friend of Aristide’s, with whom he teaches a group of young boys how to read.

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