

3/ Venezuela and the Right to Narrate w/ Laura Vidal
What does it mean to have, to demand, the right to narrate? Usually associated with Edward Said and the Palestinian experience, this concept ultimately speaks to a widespread feeling among those who are racialized, those who are gendered, those who are displaced. It reflects a more generalised need to reclaim something that feels stolen.
In this episode, I sat down with Laura Vidal, a Paris-based Venezuelan writer and researcher. Laura recently wrote an essay in Spanish entitled “¿Quién tiene derecho a contar nuestras historias?” (“Who has the right to narrate our stories?”) With our respective experiences as former regional editors for Latin America and the Middle East and North Africa respectively for Global Voices, as well as our mutual engagement on this question throughout the years, Laura and I explore the interrelated topics of identity, displacement, trauma – and the right to narrate.
Why do those who are displaced regularly get deprived of the right to narrate their own experiences? What is ‘Venezuelan-splaining’? Is it a form of gaslighting to downplay the experiences of those who are seen as having ‘made it’, by which I mean those who now live in relatively ‘stable’ cities/countries? How do those who are displaced deal with survivor’s guilt?
Recommended by Laura:
Websites:
He Got to Know the Jail of the Revolution in Which He Was Born by William Urdaneta
Global Voices’ Special Coverages on Venezuela
– What Is Happening in Venezuela? (2017)
– A timeline of Venezuela’s political deadlock (2019)
Novels:
Americanah by Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie
Pachinko by Min Jin Lee
Non Fiction
Identity and Violence: The Illusion of Destiny by Amartya Sen
Impostures interculturelles by Fred Dervin
The Other by Ryszard Kapuscinski
Podcasts
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Elia Ayoub (host, producer, sound editor, episode design), Rap and Revenge (Music), Wenyi Geng (TFTT theme design), Hisham Rifai (FTP theme design) and Molly Crabapple (FTP team profile pics).
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