Francisco Goldman
“As centuries of dictators have known, an illiterate crowd
is the easiest to rule; since the craft of reading cannot be untaught once it
has been acquired, the second-best recourse is to limit its scope.”
— Alberto Manguel
“I feel a responsibility, as I get older, to be responsible for
what I've experienced, to what I've lived and been in a position to witness. I realise
now that, as a consequence of having lived the life I have, quite apart from
the one, as I understand it, lived by most American writers, maybe I now know
some things and have some stories to tell that others don't know about or
wouldn't be able to tell. Maybe there's an intrinsic value in that lived
experience and knowledge, though of course what you do with it is everything.”
Francisco Goldman
The deeper the literature is, and the more it is imbued with
the desire to shape life, the more significantly and dynamically it will be
able to 'picture' life."
Leon Trotsky
Francisco Goldman is best known as a novelist and reporter
whose work centres on Central America and on the moral and human consequences
of violence, state terror and corruption. A large part of his work has centred on
Guatemala, exile, memory and state violence are common themes of his writing.
He is best known for the investigative account The Art of Political Murder,
which traces the 1998 assassination of Bishop Juan José Gerardi and the
political forces that sought to cover it up. Goldman's writing blends literary
narrative, reportage and personal memoir to render victims’ lives visible — a
valuable contribution that nonetheless requires political grounding to explain
the class and imperialist forces behind the crimes he documents.
Ariana E. Vigil's Understanding Francisco Goldman is a
highly regarded academic examination of the work of this gifted and important
writer. It must be said from the start that this book is long overdue. Goldman
was born to a Guatemalan mother and Jewish American father. Goldman's heritage
has shaped his unique perspective and significantly influenced his literary
themes.
Goldman documents, with clarity, the human costs of
imperialism, military repression, and oligarchic rule. He emphasises the
victims—peasants, indigenous communities, journalists and dissidents—and helps
break through the complacent narratives of Western media. His moral outrage
identifies perpetrators and abuses, but he rarely traces those abuses to the
underlying dynamics of capitalist accumulation and imperial rivalry.
What is missing from Goldman's worldview is an understanding
that wars, coups and economic “reforms” are expressions of the fundamental
contradiction between social production and private ownership; without that
materialist analysis, denunciations risk becoming appeals for better conduct by
the same ruling class that profits from repression. Goldman’s solutions tend to expose
corruption, strengthen human rights mechanisms, or press for better governance.
These remain within the terrain of bourgeois politics and cannot uproot the
capitalist interests—both
domestic oligarchies and imperial powers—that
sustain inequality and violence. While Goldman documents social suffering, he
does not generally articulate a strategy centred on independent working-class
political organisation.
To Vigil’s credit, she sets Goldman’s work within a broader
process: the violent integration of Latin America into global capitalism under
structural adjustment, privatisation, and the erosion of state provision. As
she explains in this description of her own book: “In Understanding Francisco
Goldman, the first book-length study of Goldman's life and work, I begin with a
biographical chapter drawn largely from Goldman's essays and interviews. The
following analytical chapters, one for each of Goldman's four novels and two
works of nonfiction, provide biographical, historical, political, and literary
context for each work and explore its major themes. My book examines the
influence of literary and political history on the development of Goldman's
characters and themes, as well as his use of multiple literary genres and the
role of humour in his work. I underscore that major themes in Goldman's
work—migration, political violence, love, and loss—are explored across nations
and time periods, and that they remain significant today. In Understanding
Francisco Goldman, I draw connections between the writer's life and work and demonstrate
the appreciation he deserves for his influence, diversity, and breadth. Through
his thoughtful, intellectual, transnational writing, Goldman expands the
definition of what it means to be American.”[1]
The controversial and radical nature of Goldman’s work is
certainly behind the lack of capitalist media coverage of this book. One of the
few reviews was by Judith Sierra-Rivera, who perceptively writes: “Ariana E.
Vigil has brought us a much-awaited comprehensive study on Francisco Goldman’s
writing. Even though critical articles and chapters on specific works or
aspects have proliferated in recent years, Understanding Francisco Goldman
offers a broad overview of the author’s development, his significance across a
variety of literary genres and traditions, and his complex position as a
cultural translator in the hemispheric Americas. This is precisely Vigil’s most
provocative proposition: “Goldman’s insistence on continuing to publish in and
for U.S. venues indicates his commitment to not only translating Latin American
issues to a U.S. and global audiences but also underscoring how interconnected
these issues are, particularly for U.S. citizens and residents”.
While she follows this line of analysis throughout her
presentation of Goldman’s production and in dialogue with other critics, she
does so in a widely accessible discourse that serves both literary scholars and
other readers. Vigil describes Goldman as “a truly American writer,” referring
not only to the US but also to the rest of the North American continent and the
Caribbean. She traces his racial and cultural heritage, birth and upbringing,
education and career, and travels to help readers understand Goldman’s elusive
identity. Although Goldman was born and raised in Boston, his mother is
Guatemalan and his father is Jewish-American, which meant he always travelled
to Guatemala, spoke English and Spanish, and, most importantly, navigated a
complicated heritage. Furthermore, his travels and readings led him to move
constantly among different countries on the continent and to eagerly embrace
literary influences from a wide range of authors and styles, such as Truman
Capote’s New Journalism and Gabriel García Márquez’s magical realism”.[2]
Goldman’s investigations teach readers how bourgeois states
and imperial powers conceal crimes, how impunity is institutionalised, and how
liberal human rights discourse can be recuperated by imperial policy. These
lessons are directly relevant to exposing modern wars, occupations and media
complicity. However, a serious, disciplined study of a contemporary writer such
as Francisco Goldman requires more than literary taste or moral sympathy. It
calls for a method that relates aesthetic form to social content, traces ideas
to class forces, and connects interpretation to political practice. This is
where a Marxist study is necessary. A Marxist understanding is not merely
interpretive: it clarifies how culture reproduces or challenges ruling-class
interests. When Goldman depicts violence, displacement, or memory, the reader should
ask: whose interests are served by particular framings of suffering? Does the
narrative naturalise imperialism, or expose its mechanics?
Studying Francisco Goldman’s work should strengthen readers'
historical memory and human empathy while sharpening their class analysis. Francisco
Goldman provides indispensable testimony about violence and impunity in Latin
America. His work advances conscience and awareness. But to end the cycle he
documents, it requires moving beyond humanitarian critique to a revolutionary
strategy that uproots the capitalist and imperialist interests that produce
repression—building independent working-class political power on an
international scale.
Marxism does not reduce art to propaganda, but it insists
that art is embedded in social life. As Marx warned against speculative
mystification and Trotsky against empty formalism, the aim of any Marxist is a
historically concrete, dialectical criticism that strengthens the working
class’s understanding and capacity to act. Cultural study—of Goldman or any
writer—must therefore be a component of socialist education.






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