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The Magical State: Nature, Money, and Modernity in Venezuela
C**S
Venezuela, and the 'Magic' of Petro State
Coronil is well written and this book is actually quite a fascinating read. I would recommend this book if you are interested in learning about Venezuela's historical petroleum development and rush to modernity.
T**N
Good overview of 20th century Venezuela plus..
an interesting insight into why oil rent cannot buy industrial development. In addition to historical overview, Coronil describes the simultaneously enabling and corrosive effect of oil rent via several focused examples such as the failure to establish a Venezuelan tractor industry. These examples are especially convincing because of the interview material used to round out the characters of the main actors.On the other hand, the effort to connect the development difficulties of Venezeula with the general theory of rent capture is uninspired.
C**E
Apasionante
En Español:Puede que la información teórica en este libro no sea demasiado profunda, pero sin duda es pertinente y esclarecedora. Pero lo más importante es que su lectura provoca una imaginación teatral, cinematográfica y literaria de los acontecimientos que hicieron posible la Venezuela antes de Chávez y que, por lo tanto, explican al actual proceso político para bien y para mal y sin las contaminaciones de la polarización actual, que tanto daño le han hecho al pensamientos social venezolano y latinoamericano.El Estado Mágico de Coronil va dejando la antropología para sumergirnos en un cruce pasmoso de las novelas negras que fueron coincidiendo en la identidad venezolana del petróleo.In English:It is possible that the theoretical imformation is not so deep as we would like, but there is no doubt that it is pertinent and clarifying. But the most important, its lecture provokes a theatral, cinematographical and literarial imagination of the events that made pre-Chavez' Venezuela possible. And for so on, those events also explain the political process now a day (for the good and for the bad) without the pollution from actual polarisation which have been so harmful to the venezuelan and latinamerican social thinking.The Coronil's Magical State leave gradually anthropology theories in order to plung us in a frightening black novels crossroad where the oil-venezuelan identity match up.Daniel Castro AniyarSociologist and Anthropologist VENEZUELA INDEPENDIENTE, 1810-1960. Mariano Picón-Salas et al
E**H
Intriguing, but poorly executed.
In his introduction to The Magical State, Coronil writes: "As an oil nation, Venezuela was seen as having two bodies, a politcal body made up of its citizens and a natural body made up of its rich subsoil." Coronil's subject is how the state interacted with these two bodies. Abundant oil money, he argues, raised the ambitions of the state and the expectations of the people to an unrealistic extreme. Although excessive cashflow could not be spent efficiently in an underdeveloped country like Venezuela, pretending to do so was the government's sole claim to legitimacy; thus a charade of progress and benevolence pervaded the political culture of an export-driven, dependent economy.Coronil's ideas are fascinating, and Part I alone (of four) makes this book worth reading. Unfortunately, Coronil does not bring his ideas home persuasively. Instead his book slowly degenerates into deconstructed historical anecdotes and glimpses of bitter subjectivity: reminders of his own experience with the government of Venezuela. Coronil's book casts an intriguing theoretical perspective on more conventional, more competent histories of Venezuela by scholars like Judith Ewell or John Lombardi. Read them first. The Magical State is for those who are comfortable with the historical framework and are ready to read critically--caveat lector.
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