Sacred Cow (Masks)

Sacred Cow (Masks)

by Amanda Hopkinson (Translator), Diamela Eltit (Author)

Synopsis

?Ana spent one perfect night with Manuel. She told me about it quite unexpectedly, knowing in advance how hopelessly caught up I would become in her reminiscences. She went into a detailed description of her expensive, provocative outfit, and I could visualise her walking forward, her legs deliberately restricted by her shiny black dress. Ana confessed that she was so driven by her depraved desire that night that she consciously sought to focus people's looks on the violent rippling of her thighs, barely disguised beneath the shiny black material. I watched her smiling and it hurt.? As the forces of political repression encircle Santiago, the capital of Chile, the narrator raises the question of the relationship between her sexual cravings and fantasies and the domination of women in Chilean society. Sacred Cow is an intense, erotic unveiling of the human psyche.

$13.34

Quantity

1 in stock

More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 112
Publisher: Serpent's Tail
Published: 15 Aug 1994

ISBN 10: 1852422874
ISBN 13: 9781852422875

Media Reviews
?Diamela Eltit has emerged as one of the strongest literary voices in Latin America today. One of a group of young Chilean writers who lived through military dictatorship rather than opt for exile, she uses the female body as a site for power relations and physical violence. Tough and uncompromising, this is sexual politics at its best? Jo Labanyi ?Eltit?s claustrophobic novel marries sexual violence and political repression with sickening intensity? Independent ?The first English translation of a stunning new voice in Latin American literature? El Mundo Latino
Author Bio
Diamela Eltit was born in Santiago in 1949. She is a performance and video artist known for her work with Santiago's down and outs. This is the first translation in English of a stunning contemporary Latin American voice.