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Lädt ... King Leopold's Ghost: A Story of Greed, Terror, and Heroism in Colonial Africa (Original 1998; 1999. Auflage)von Adam Hochschild
Werk-InformationenSchatten über dem Kongo: Die Geschichte eines fast vergessenen Menschheitsverbrechen von Adam Hochschild (1998)
Five star books (187) » 9 mehr Best Biographies (52) Books Read in 2018 (1,759) Books Read in 2015 (3,083) Read This Next (65) Review 1 (28) Tour of Africa (2) Lädt ...
Melde dich bei LibraryThing an um herauszufinden, ob du dieses Buch mögen würdest. Keine aktuelle Diskussion zu diesem Buch. Before reading this book, my knowledge of African history was scanty. I have read a few books on North Africa, but none on the history of the sub-Saharan continent. Adam Hochschild’s book, King Leopold’s Ghost, proved to be a startling introduction. First off, the book has a reputation for brutality. Before I began, people warned me to prepare myself. I don’t think anything could prepare someone for the horrors perpetrated on the people native to Africa by the European colonizers. The term “colonize” sounds so innocuous that it masks the violence of the process. Hochschild highlights King Leopold II, king of the small and relatively new country of Belgium. Leopold’s bottomless well of greed and ruthless ambition caused him to gain control, underhandedly, of the massive area of central Africa called the Congo. He didn’t share this wealth with his country. So, the people of Belgium didn’t even profit from any of his activities using slavery to gain riches from the sale of ivory and rubber at the beginning. This changed after the king died. To make it clear that terror and exploitation are not unique to Leopold or Belgium, Hochschild talks about violence perpetrated by Africans on other Africans before the Europeans arrived. He also touches on inhumanity demonstrated by other countries worldwide, but primarily by Europeans in their colonization of Africa and theft of its natural resources. He takes pains to discuss the complicity of the United States in similar outrages within its borders. People have told me that Hochschild cherry-picked his facts and that this book presents an unfair view of the place and the period. I find this difficult to believe. He provides his sources, and the sheer number of damning statistics, facts, and anecdotes cannot be denied. Though the story sickened me, I cannot discount it, and I am glad I read it. We need to know history, no matter how horrible it may have been. Looking at historical darkness in the heart of Africa should prompt us to search for traces of that darkness in ourselves because that’s the only way to ever rid ourselves of it. An outstanding book that clinically and calmly exposes the outrage of the Belgian King's appalling crimes in colonial Africa. Along with Conrad's Heart of Darkness and Alice Seeley Harris's photos of severed hands, this book should be required reading for all westerners so we never forget the worst aspects of European colonial history. While not all colonial leaders were as depraved as King Leopold, the colonial era was fundamentally founded on exploitation. The Belgians, in the Congo, merely took that exploitation to an extreme.
Although much of the material in "King Leopold's Ghost" is secondhand -- the author has drawn heavily from Jules Marchal's scholarly four-volume history of turn-of-the-century Congo and from "The Scramble for Africa," Thomas Pakenham's wide-ranging 1991 study of the European conquest of the continent -- Hochschild has stitched it together into a vivid, novelistic narrative that makes the reader acutely aware of the magnitude of the horror perpetrated by King Leopold and his minions. Adam Hochschild's "King Leopold's Ghost" is an absorbing and horrifying account of the traffic in human misery that went on in Leopold's so-called Congo Free State, and of the efforts of a handful of heroic crusaders to bring the atrocities to light. Among other things, it stands as a reminder of how quickly enormities can be forgotten. AuszeichnungenPrestigeträchtige AuswahlenBemerkenswerte Listen
Literaturhinweise zu diesem Werk aus externen Quellen. Wikipedia auf Englisch (17)Begriffe wie "Holocaust" oder "Genozid" mögen das verbrecherische Tun im sogenannten "Kongo-Freistaat" nicht ganz korrekt umschreiben. Tatsache bleibt, dass in der zentralafrikanischen "Privatkolonie" des belgischen Königs Leopold II. zwischen 1885 und 1908 ca. 10 Millionen Menschen auf oft grausame Weise zu Tode kamen. Der amerikanische Publizist (zuletzt BA 3/95), Kenner totalitärer Unterdrückungssysteme, analysiert mit Akribie und psychologischer Schärfe die Motivationen der Akteure dieses in Vergessenheit geratenen Dramas. Nicht nur die (Schreibtisch-)Täter, auch die Opfer und deren z. T. prominente Anwälte, darunter E. D. Morel und A. C. Doyle, erweckt Hochschild zum Leben. - Ein brillant geschriebenes Werk, spannend und ergreifend bis zur letzten Seite, das Pionieren der Menschenrechtsbewegung ein Denkmal der besonderen Art setzt. (2) (Roland Schmitt) Keine Bibliotheksbeschreibungen gefunden.
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Google Books — Lädt ... GenresMelvil Decimal System (DDC)967.51022History and Geography Africa Central Africa Democratic Republic of the Congo (Congo-Kinshasa); Rwanda & Burundi Democratic Republic of the Congo (Congo-Kinshasa -- former Zaire)Klassifikation der Library of Congress [LCC] (USA)BewertungDurchschnitt:
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"Listen to the yell of Leopold’s ghost Burning in Hell for his hand-maimed host. Hear how the demons chuckle and yell Cutting his hands off, down in Hell." (p. 266)
There has been a a great forgetting of the tragic deaths of millions of Africans just a mere 125 years ago. This well - researched book thoroughly documents the Belgian atrocities in the Congo from 1890 until approximately 1910. ( )