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Sydney H. Schanberg (1934–2016)

Auteur de The Death and Life of Dith Pran

3+ oeuvres 108 utilisateurs 5 critiques

A propos de l'auteur

Sydney Hillel Schanberg was born on January 17, 1934 in Clinton, Massachusetts. He received a bachelor's degree in American history from Harvard University in 1955. He was drafted in 1956 and served as a reporter for an Army newspaper in Frankfurt. He joined The New York Times in 1959 as a copy boy afficher plus and became a staff reporter in 1960, covering general assignments and government agencies. In 1964, he began covering the New York State Legislature, and in 1967, he was named Albany bureau chief, in charge of state government reporting. He joined The Times's foreign staff in 1969 and was named bureau chief in New Delhi. He covered India's 13-day war with Pakistan in 1971. He met Dith Pran in 1972, and as Schanberg's reporting from Vietnam and Cambodia grew, The Times hired Dith as his aide and translator. As the Southeast Asia correspondent from 1973 to 1975, Schanberg focused increasingly on the Khmer Rouge insurgency. He won a Pulitzer Prize for covering Cambodia's fall to the Khmer Rouge in 1975. In 1980, he wrote a cover article for The New York Times Magazine entitled The Death and Life of Dith Pran, which was the story of his Cambodian colleague's survival during the genocide. It was later published as a book and inspired the 1984 movie The Killing Fields. Schanberg was The Times's metropolitan editor from 1977 to 1980 and wrote a column focusing on New York from 1981 to 1985. It was discontinued after he criticized the Times's coverage of the proposed Westway highway in Manhattan. He left the paper after 26 years to write a column for New York Newsday. He also wrote articles for Vanity Fair, Penthouse, and The Nation and columns of media criticism for The Village Voice. Beyond the Killing Fields, an anthology of his reporting, was published in 2010. He also won two George Polk Memorial awards, two Overseas Press Club awards, and Sigma Delta Chi's distinguished journalism prize. He died following a heart attack on July 9, 2016 at the age of 82. (Bowker Author Biography) afficher moins

Œuvres de Sydney H. Schanberg

The Death and Life of Dith Pran (1985) 72 exemplaires
Killing Fields (1984) 16 exemplaires

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Important Journalism at the Time

"The Death and Life of Dith Pran" and Schanberg's reporting helped introduce America to the Cambodian Genocide. Because of that, this book is of historical and literary significance. However, being published in a newspaper just a year after the Cambodian Genocide ended, there was not much time for Schanberg or anyone else to do much research into the matter. As such, this book is mostly about Schanberg's despondency after losing his friend Dith Pran for four years. The book also covers what happened to Pran during the Genocide, albeit briefly and without much detail. The book is less than 80 pages.

Since being published, numerous memoirs and studies about the Cambodian Genocide have replaced the importance of "The Death and Life of Dith Pran." There is a wealth of new scholarly information, journalism, and biography from which readers can pull information from besides this book. Nevertheless, "The Death and Life of Dith Pran" was important from a cultural perspective.
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Signalé
mvblair | 1 autre critique | Aug 9, 2020 |
Selected articles from Pulitzer prize winning journalist Sydney Schanberg, particularly known for highlighting the atrocities and quite frankly shocking external political manipulations in Cambodia that was being overshadowed by the Vietnam war. His most famous story, included here was also the basis for the superb film The Killing Fields (One of my favourite films, highly recommended).

It’s a hard book to review. Whilst a plea from a war reporter for peace, it could also be said to be too bitty and isn’t an book to be read straight through. It covers the Cambodia genocide, the horrendous birth of Bangladesh, Vietnam war, thoughts on Iraq and research into Vietnam POWs left behind and denied. Schanberg writes in a beautifully clear and passionate way. Context is provided, the selected articles show a timeline (in particular the Cambodia pieces) and it’s very easy to gain insight. It’s not just historical reportage though there are essays on language of war (the horrors hidden by “collateral damage”) and the battle between governments & their reporters and the damage to the "truth" that are fascinating.

Why I read it though, was for the Cambodian section and the most famous story. It’s worth the price of admission alone.

It’s a hard story to summarise, it deals with the fall of country into horror, the forced march of a population from towns and cities into the countryside and the starvation that follows, the culling of all intellectuals (teachers, writers, doctors), the fields of mass murder. It is a huge story made personal. It is a story of hope and friendship, of one who has crippling survivors guilt for failing to save his friend and the other who survives against huge odds. A story of journalism and war, clash of cultures. It’s a short piece that says so many things.

It is hard to review because of the impact it made when I was young, so formative and now so familiar. I cannot believe though that this is not worth reading to this unfamiliar with the story, that you won’t gain something.

Recommended: Though it’s very hard to find outside of a e-book so perhaps just track down the film. I guarantee its worth it.
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Signalé
clfisha | 1 autre critique | Dec 23, 2013 |
Brilliant

Schanberg was a journalist for the New York Times covering the war in Cambodia when the Khmer Rouge took over the country. The Killing fields, as book & film, is a very powerful story of friendship and survival and is the story of Dith Pran, a Cambodian journalist. Pran was left behind when all the foreigners were ejected from Cambodia and lived in the then closed Khmer Rouge regime as Pol Pot enacted his Year 0 social experiment on a grand scale. I finished this on the bus on the way to Phnom Penh and visiting S-21 and the Killing Fields with it so fresh in my mind was an experience I don’t think I’ll ever forget. However it doesn’t need to be read in situ, it is a brilliant book full of stirring writing and if you haven’t seen the film I thoroughly recommend it as it is a very good adaptation. This book adds some of Schanberg’s other war journalism in Vietnam & Bangladesh as well as his coverage of MIA US servicemen left behind by the US government and his thoughts on the war in Iraq. The message of the book is that war is never clinical, that “collateral damage” is a sanitisation of murder and that the abstraction of making decisions way behind the front lines contributes to atrocity.

Overall – Powerfully intelligent writing on the subject of war. Highly recommended. Have a box of tissues to hand when reading though.
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½
 
Signalé
psutto | 1 autre critique | Dec 19, 2013 |
This is the book version of the long article Schanberg wrote about his colleague and friend Dith Pran after Dith's escape from Cambodia. It is the basis for The Killing Fields, but is interesting in its own right as a brief memoir that lightly touches upon the agony of having privilege in circumstances where your loved ones do not. Schanberg's prose is spare and to the point; he's no great stylist, but the simplicity of the writing serves to convey immediacy and urgency. I recommend reading this first, watching the film, then watching or reading Gray's Swimming to Cambodia.… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
OshoOsho | 1 autre critique | Mar 30, 2013 |

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108
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