January 26, 2005: Reading Room
Kids
who kill By Maurice Timothy Reidy ’97 As a senior in the Woodrow Wilson School, P.W. Singer ’97 wrote part of his thesis on what, at the time, was a relatively new development in contemporary warfare: hiring out private contractors to perform work usually reserved for soldiers. Later he turned his thesis into a book, Corporate Warriors: The Rise of the Privatized Military Industry (2004), which drew international media attention to a practice that is now regularly employed in Iraq. In 1998 Singer landed a job with the Balkans Task Force in the Office of the Secretary of Defense, where he helped organize the international team that documented human rights abuses in Kosovo. Now, in Children at War, published by Pantheon this month, Singer explores another development that has become a tragic part of wars around the globe, from Colombia and the Sudan to Kashmir and Iraq: using children as soldiers. The first American killed in Afghanistan was shot by a 14-year-old boy. And the insurgents in Iraq regularly use children as decoys or soldiers. “Every single place U.S. forces have been deployed in the war against terror — those are child-soldier zones,” says Singer, now a fellow at the Brookings Institution in Washington, D.C. For centuries, one of the unwritten rules of war was that children would never be used in battle, says Singer. But that has changed with the advent of smaller and lighter weapons, which make fighting easier, and the prevalence of diseases like AIDS, which, among other things, has created a substantial number of orphans, “a group especially susceptible to being pulled into war,” writes Singer. Today, children are regularly abducted and forced to fight by rebels and military leaders in hot spots around the world. In Sierra Leone, for example, children played a prominent role in the 10-year civil war. And in Uganda, rebel leader Joseph Kony has used children to wage a long and bloody battle against the government. When Singer first began studying this phenomenon, some people were skeptical that the practice was as widespread as he contends. One participant at a scholarly conference bluntly told him: “I don’t believe you.” But policy-makers “can’t pretend [child soldiers] don’t exist,” Singer says. Singer lays out several ways world leaders can reduce the number of
child soldiers, including defining the practice as a war crime and increasing
funding for programs designed to integrate child soldiers back into society.
Children are severely scarred by fighting and are often among the first
to fight when war begins again, says Singer. “Former child soldiers,”
Singer writes, “must be treated like the victims they are.”
Maurice Timothy Reidy ’97 is an associate editor at Commonweal Magazine.
Studying
the master By Louis Jacobson ’92 Mark Stevens ’73 interviewed Willem de Kooning only once, in the late 1970s, when the celebrated painter was nearing the end of his career and suffering from the early stages of dementia. “He was about 5-foot-7 and grizzled, but there was a brightness in his eye and a wry expression on his face,” Stevens recalls. “He had two rocking chairs in a very large studio. He’d sit in one and you’d sit beside him, both rocking. He always had one eye on his paintings, even as you were talking about other things.” About a decade after that meeting, Stevens and his wife, Annalyn Swan ’73, began research on a biography of de Kooning. After another decade, their 700-page book, De Kooning: An American Master, was published by Knopf in November. Stevens and Swan, seasoned art critics, suspected that de Kooning, who grew up poor in the Netherlands and emigrated to the U.S., would be a worthy subject for a full-length biography. “Immigration is one of the great American themes, and in de Kooning, the story plays out in a classical way,” says Stevens, a Woodrow Wilson School major at Princeton who has been an art critic at Newsweek, The New Republic, and now New York magazine. Moreover, in a century notable for increasing mechanization and technical innovation in art, de Kooning was one of the last painters who lived and died by “the bravura brushstroke,” says Swan, an English major who has been a music critic and senior arts editor for Newsweek. Stevens and Swan, who first met at the Daily Princetonian, interviewed hundreds of contemporaries in de Kooning’s artistic and social circles. The artist’s daughter, Lisa de Kooning, along with her mother, Joan Ward, proved extremely helpful. (Ward and de Kooning had an affair in the 1950s and remained close until his death.) Lisa de Kooning and Ward didn’t flinch when the authors probed the artist’s personal side, including his many extramarital affairs, his alcohol abuse, and his sometimes-stormy relationships with friends, Stevens says. As they delved into de Kooning’s story, Stevens and Swan discovered an artist with a sense of humor — something of a rarity among midcentury art-world giants. “He hated pretense and loathed highfalutin language about art,” Swan says. Even the grotesque, rage-filled approach to the female form seen in de Kooning’s “Woman” paintings struck Stevens and Swan not as simple misogyny, as some critics have long believed, but as having a palpable undercurrent of humor. Now that they’ve spent a decade of their lives researching one
man, Stevens and Swan say they have no regrets about their choice. “We
saw him warts and all,” Swan says, “but still, we can tremendously
admire what he stood for, and what he added to 20th-century art.”
Louis Jacobson ’92 is deputy editor of Roll Call, a newspaper covering Capitol Hill.
BOOK SHORTS By K.F.G. More books by alumni and faculty are listed on the web, click here.
For a complete list of books received, click here.
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