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Lädt ... Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee: An Indian History of the American West (1991. Auflage)von Dee Brown (Autor)
Werk-InformationenBegrabt mein Herz an der Biegung des Flusses von Dee Brown
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Melde dich bei LibraryThing an um herauszufinden, ob du dieses Buch mögen würdest. Keine aktuelle Diskussion zu diesem Buch. Dee Brown se v této knize pokusil zmapovat temnou kapitolu amerických dÄ›jin, kterou bezesporu dobývánà amerického Západu je, a vytvoÅ™il fascinujÃcà dokument o obdobà let 60 – 90 pÅ™edminulého stoletÃ, o obdobà takzvaných indiánských válek, kdy se vlivem stále rostoucà expanze bÃlých osadnÃku, valÃcÃch se na Západ jako nespoutaná lavina s definitivnà platnostà dovrÅ¡il tragický osud původnÃch obyvatel severoamerického kontinentu. This book is a dense history of Native American history. I remember reading this as a Reader's Digest Condense book when I was much younger and I imagine a lot of people at the time read this book in that format. However, it was worthwhile to actually read the entire book. It provides an interesting comparison to the way that Native American history was taught in school. I actually do recommend reading this book if you have an interest in Native American history. Since it's a history I am not sure that spoiler applies but the source of the title was quite interesting to me. It refers to the fact that the parents of Crazy Horse buried his heart and other remains in a secret spot near Wounded Knee. Heartbreaking, mindset-shattering, eviscerating. To get the positives out of the way first: Dee Brown's immense wealth of knowledge and research contributes to make Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee a detailed-yet-well-paced experience. Each chapter chronicles a particular battle, people, or plight, in rough chronological order. Without resorting to extensive flashbacks or appendices, Brown manages to create a sense of the West's treatment of Native Americans from colonisation to the particularly brutal 1800s, when genocide was effectively carried out. Using transcripts, interviews and evidence from the time, Brown creates a moving portrait that shatters many myths which still resonate, and reminds us of the sins of such ground-level intolerance. Admittedly, the book would've held more sway when first released, for a generation raised on WWII and '50s-era patriotism. Nowadays, we're more aware of the graphic nature of the treatment of the Native Americans, and so the book's heavy-handedness is particularly evident. Yet, it's easy to forget how marginalised this culture remains - in social understanding, in cultural portrayals, etc. With a pointedness approaching black humour, Brown opens each chapter with a detail of the more commonly-known 'great' events that occurred around the world concurrently with that particular act of one-sided warfare. The development of the telephone. The publication of all the great works of Romantic literature and art. The freaking Emancipation Proclamation! Yet here, in the very same country, an entire race - nay, many dozens of races - were being wiped out. It seems gauche to qualify levels of genocide, but this remains a particularly insidious one. Unlike the oligarchic genocide of the Nazis (where one feels as if removal of a few key figures would destabilise the structure), or the hereditary problems that plague, say, Israel and Palestine, this crime seems one of brutal, individual hatred. The most chilling massacres that Brown describes often occur simply because a few individuals decided - in a moment - they didn't care to be civil with these fellow human beings. Bury My Heart is perhaps the pinnacle of pop history. In telling his tale exclusively from the other side, Brown weaves a manipulative, overly literary tale. Most of his characters are pure heroes, they speak entirely in riddles, and he pours on emotion like it was a John Williams soundtrack. At times, the academic and the writer in me cry out for some editing, perhaps some levity between the darkest moments, definitely the occasional examination of social and historical contexts that doesn't rely entirely on pandering to our heartstrings. Even when he does describe those white men who were sympathetic, or - as is always the case - seemed to find greater strength in "crossing over" to the Native side completely, Brown could give us more. It's fascinating to read of these men who married into tribes and basically lived with them, or of the young Native Americans who went to university and obtained degrees in the white man's world. But they only enter the narrative at the point when they become part of the bloodshed. What were their daily social patterns like? How did their friends and family respond to the change, and how did it affect the way they interacted in their respective new worlds? This would have been eminently more fascinating, but perhaps it's just outside the scope of Brown's aims. Yet, this seems a cheap allegation to hurl at such a noble work. After all, where were the moments of levity during what was effectively a decades-long trench war? Where were the moments of tolerance? With each passing chapter, and each passing massacre, the book beats down any resistance you may have to the idea that there is goodness in the minds of men. It's not happy news, but if there's one area of history where that worldview needs to be accepted, it may just be here. keine Rezensionen | Rezension hinzufügen
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Literaturhinweise zu diesem Werk aus externen Quellen. Wikipedia auf Englisch (27)History.
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HTML:The "fascinating" #1 New York Times bestseller that awakened the world to the destruction of American Indians in the nineteenth-century West (The Wall Street Journal). First published in 1970, Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee generated shockwaves with its frank and heartbreaking depiction of the systematic annihilation of American Indian tribes across the western frontier. In this nonfiction account, Dee Brown focuses on the betrayals, battles, and massacres suffered by American Indians between 1860 and 1890. He tells of the many tribes and their renowned chiefsâ??from Geronimo to Red Cloud, Sitting Bull to Crazy Horseâ??who struggled to combat the destruction of their people and culture. Forcefully written and meticulously researched, Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee inspired a generation to take a second look at how the West was won. This ebook features an illustrated biography of Dee Brown including rare photos from the author's personal colle Keine Bibliotheksbeschreibungen gefunden. |
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Google Books — Lädt ... GenresMelvil Decimal System (DDC)978.00497History and Geography North America Western U.S. Ethnic And National Groups Great Plains TribesKlassifikation der Library of Congress [LCC] (USA)BewertungDurchschnitt:
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> LA TRAGÉDIE DE LA CONQUÊTE DE L’OUEST. — Historien et bibliothécaire de l'université de l'Illinois, Dee Brown a consacré sa vie à l'histoire des États-Unis au XIXᵉ siècle, jusqu’à son décès en 2002.
Publié pour la première fois en 1970, Enterre mon cœur à Wounded Knee a été traduit dans le monde entier. Pour une bonne raison : ce livre a changé pour toujours la vision que nous avons de l’histoire des États-Unis et de la relation de ce pays avec les premiers habitants du continent américain.
Largement basé sur des documents inédits (archives militaires et gouvernementales, procès-verbaux des traités, récits de première main…), il retrace les trente années décisives, de 1860 à 1890, qui ont marqué ce que l’on appelle « la conquête de l'Ouest » : de la longue Marche des Navajos en 1860 au massacre de Wounded Knee en 1890, Enterre mon cœur se fait la chronique de la dépossession des Indiens qui perdent leurs terres, leur liberté et souvent la vie au nom de l’expansion américaine.
Si l’histoire est souvent écrite du point de vue des vainqueurs, ce livre donne la parole aux vaincus et compose un chant tragique et inoubliable.
Ce classique, qui était depuis quelques années épuisé en France, fait enfin l’objet d’une nouvelle édition entièrement révisée : un superbe cahier photos accompagne cette nouvelle traduction. La préface de Joseph Boyden, le célèbre écrivain canadien d’origine irlando-amérindienne, met en perspective l’apport de cet ouvrage à la relecture de l’histoire humaine.
*Enterre mon cœur à Wounded Knee, Dee Brown, Préface de Joseph Boyden, (traduit de l’américain par Nathalie Cunnington), Ed. Albin Michel, 480 pages, 24 €.
—L’Homme en Question, (24), Eté 2008, (p. 6)
> EXTRAIT DE LA PRÉFACE DE JOSEPH BOYDEN, auteur du Chemin des âmes et des Saisons de la solitude, à paraître en août 2009. — C’est en 1982 que j’ai pour la première fois entendu parler d’Enterre mon cœur à Wounded Knee […] Il avait été publié en Amérique plus de dix ans auparavant […] À la lecture de ce livre, ma façon de voir le monde, mes opinions politiques, ma sensibilité ont subi une véritable révolution conceptuelle. L’adolescent à problèmes que j’étais s’est retrouvé contraint de regarder autour de lui. Mais surtout, fait prendre conscience du sang qui coulait dans mes veines, le sang d’ancêtres Ojibwés et européens […] fort que nous devons comprendre, dans toute leur complexité, notre histoire commune et les actions de nos ancêtres avant de pouvoir reconnaître la responsabilité de notre sang dans cette folie meurtrière. C’est seulement à ce moment-là que nous pourrons avancer tous ensemble […] Dix-sept ans après que je me le suis procuré, ce livre continue de guider ma plume. Parfois en sortent les voix des opprimés, parfois encore, celles de fantômes qui exigent simplement qu’on les écoute. Nous sommes tout à la fois les conquérants et les conquis, dans un même corps, et c’est cela que Dee Brown nous invite à reconnaître.
*Enterre mon cœur à Wounded Knee, Dee Brown, Préface de Joseph Boyden, (traduit de l’américain par Nathalie Cunnington), Ed. Albin Michel, 480 pages, 24 €.
—L’Homme en Question, (24), Eté 2008, (p. 6)