Английская Википедия:Emergency Sex and Other Desperate Measures
Шаблон:Short description Шаблон:Italic title Шаблон:More citations needed Emergency Sex and Other Desperate Measures, by Heidi Postlewait, Kenneth Cain and Andrew Thomson, is a 2004 memoir of three young people who join the United Nations (UN) during the 1990s. It recounts the authors' experiences during the United Nations Transitional Authority in Cambodia and UN peacekeeping operations.
The book is critical of some aspects of the United Nations and its operations. Figures within the UN, including Shashi Tharoor and Kofi Annan, criticised the authors for releasing the book. It was adapted into a 2007 stage play.
Summary
Thomson is a New Zealand-born physician who is inspired to work in Cambodia after meeting a mature age Cambodian medical student in his Auckland University class. Postlewait is a New York social worker who is struggling to make ends meet after the end of her marriage. Cain is an idealistic Harvard graduate who does not want to go into corporate law.
The three stories intersect through the years from Cambodia, to Somalia, Haiti, Rwanda, Bosnia and Liberia. This is the first account from UN workers on the front lineШаблон:Citation needed and an honest memoir about the successes and failures of the UN.
Reception
Other critiques were not as impressed by the book. The Guardian claimed that one should not become an aid worker if "Your favourite book about aid is Emergency Sex."[1]
The New Yorker questioned the behavior of the authors, and in its review quoted figures who had been criticized in the book, including Shashi Tharoor, the Under-Secretary-General for Communications and Public Information and an overseer of the peacekeeping mission in the former Yugoslavia. Tharoor stated that “[i]t didn’t seem right for people to work for the organization and trash it the way these people did.” Doing so while collecting a paycheck, he said, was “slightly contemptible. The review further noted that "“Emergency Sex,” with its tales of drug use and disillusionment and its emphasis on personal drama, is not a typical whistle-blowing tract; however, the authors do make a number of serious allegations of corruption, negligence, and inadequate leadership, particularly with regard to the genocides in Rwanda and Srebrenica. It also suggested that some of the authors' comments could be described as reckless, and that Andrew Thomson would like his job back; Thomson, who had been stationed in Geneva "for the remainder of his term" at the time of the book's publishing, was fired for his contributions.Шаблон:Citation needed
Thomson said, “I think Shashi Tharoor has put himself and the organization on a really slippery slope, and at the ugly bottom of that you run into historical revisionism and Holocaust deniers", but stated that he still wished "to go on serving as a doctor to the staff,”[2] Later, with the help of the Government Accountability Project, a whistleblower's association, Thomson was reinstated and promoted.Шаблон:Citation needed
Adaptations
Emergency Sex and Other Desperate Measures was adapted for the stage by Australian playwright, Damien Millar. It won Griffin Theatre Company’s annual Griffin Award for an outstanding new play in 2007.
The book has been optioned for televisionШаблон:When. Randall Wallace, script writer for Braveheart, is working on the screen play.Шаблон:Citation needed
References
- Английская Википедия
- 2004 non-fiction books
- 2007 plays
- Works about the United Nations
- Books about Haiti
- Plays set in Rwanda
- Plays set in Bosnia and Herzegovina
- Books about Cambodia
- Books about Liberia
- Non-fiction books about war
- Books about Somalia
- Books about Rwanda
- Books about Bosnia and Herzegovina
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