Central America After the Wars Part One - Downsizing Armies & A Tale of One Village
Series: Despues de las Guerras: Central America After the Wars
From: Maria Martin
Length: 00:58:55
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More from Maria Martin
Central America After the Wars Part Four - The Press, Indigenous Identity & The Artists' View
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From: Maria Martin
Free Press, Identity & Discrimination
Central America After the Wars Part Three - The Other Border, Community Radio & Peace-or-Pieces
(00:58:55)
From: Maria Martin
After the peace, the other border and the medium is the message
Central America After the Wars Part Two - Gangs, Women, A Look Back
(00:58:55)
From: Maria Martin
Women, Identity, Youth, Gangs, Politics and Power
Piece Description
Downsizing Armies John Burnett reports on the scaling down of the region's armies. A Tale of One Village Maria Martin takes a look at the past, present, and future of one Central American Village - a search for land and community in the jungle of Central America. Shorter versions of these pieces have aired on Latino USA.
Broadcast History
Shorter versions of these pieces have aired on Latino USA.





Jonathan Groubert
Posted on March 26, 2006 at 07:34 AM | Permalink
Review of Central America After the Wars Part One - Downsizing Armies & A Tale of One Village
Is this one documentary? There is no doubt that this program is an exercise in integrity and engaged radio making. However, it has a somewhat confusing format. The first part recounts a Guatemalan village's bloody history of war and fear, ostensibly to set up the larger report about its present in part two. Pero no...
Part two, after the 20-minute mark, is produced by another journalist who has a totally different philosphy of reportage. The stylistic differences are somewhat jarring. Part 1 comes off as slow and overly earnest when juxtaposed with part 2's quicker edits, more energetic story telling and richer sound use.
In part three we finally return to our Guatemalan village for another stylistic shift and the most successful segment. Here the program focuses on one young girl's personal story as she takes on life after a devastating war. And it is here the program is most effective at giving Guatemala's plight a human face.
Despite the high-quality writing, presentation and content, I'm left with a nagging feeling that these are actually two programs, segments 1 and 3 together, that would have been stronger if separated from segment 2.
Highly recommended for any discussion on the history of American foreign policy, Hispanic months and/or celebrations. Also part two is totally self contained and could be potentially used as a stand-alone piece as a segment in a magazine program.