Dunn offers a detailed contrast between the lives of the planter elite and the enslaved majority. This is a landmark work in the history of plantation agriculture in the West Indies.
The work should also interest readers of Southern history. Dunn compares the rise of a cavalier elite in Barbados to the same development in Virginia. Planters from the West Indies, especially Barbados, dominated the early years of the colony of (South) Carolina.
Other works on this period of West Indian history are Richard Sheridan's Sugar and Slavery and Gary Puckrein's Little England. Works by Hilary Beckles examine the lives of women and Blacks in this period of West Indian history.
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It is a lot like a good literature book with "DK" style illustrations. My male students used to be mezmerized by the full-page, full-color diagram of a continental soldier---I confess I was too. That's not all though, the book is very easy to use-for student and teacher alike.
Far from being a dry,social studies text, this book has excellent photographs, illustrations, maps, diagrams, charts, time-lines, and primary-source literature.
This book teaches social studies the way that children prefer to learn it----visually!
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The most interesting aspect of the book is both the historical and international aspects applied to the history wars. It allows the reader to put this recent battle into a more helpful historical perspective as many examples from the past are presented. The examples from the other countries are also useful in giving a global approach to the issues. This is how it should be for a book that covers the battles over what should be taught to children concerning U.S. and world history. A good book that shows the problems that begin when politicians get involved in the teaching of history.
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We settled Massachusetts, and the indians, blacks, gays and women were persecuted.
Then, we started a westward expansion which led to persecution for indians, blacks, gays, and women.
During the revolutionary war some white guys fought or something, but it is important to note that the indians, blacks, gays...
This book is a proselyting tool, a transparent piece of propaganda. I didn't convert.
As a student, I found this book's approach to teaching history disastrous and mildly insulting. First of all, it fails to convey even the most cursory knowledge of history by shunning, at all costs, cruel Old Regime teaching methods that might require DATE memorization or familiarity with historical FACTS. With nothing to "Lock On" to, it's very hard to retain anything. Even worse, however, are the implications of the book's approach. I like History because I enjoy being able to look at a set of evidence and trying to figure out, based on otherwise stale information, what *actually* happened, what life was like. Somehow, I got the sense that by describing outright "what life was like," the book implies that to force students to learn INFORMATION is useless, that students are unable to think for themselves and interpret historical information with any accuracy.
I think I should comment, also, on one reviewer's dismissal of this book as "Nouveau History." I come close to BEING one of the "Tenured Radicals" this reviewer had so much disdain for, and I still hated this book. I would hate it if I were communist. There's so much wrong with it that to criticize it for its left-wing perspective is plain silly.
I would recommend "The American Promise," by James L. Rourke, Micheal P. Johnson, and a few others instead.
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Mexicans who are not objective, and are basically jealous and contemptous of "gringos" will sometimes bring up the supposition that "we Mexicans married our Indians, and you Americans killed yours." This book tends to support that view.
I had a 3x great grandmother who was pure Indian (from Virginia). To my knowledge, our family never tried to hide this fact. Many Americans that I know ARE part Indian, maybe not very much, and never to my knowledge feel ashamed of it. Among Americans, Indian heritage is often a source of pride.
I found that when living in Mexico City, if I referred to the house maid, who was a native Indian, as an "Indian", 'that I would get chastised for using a term which most Mexicans consider to be the equivalent of the "N" word. "Call her 'the girl' for God's sake, just don't say 'Indian'!", I was told.
In addition, my Spanish was good enough to overhear some Mexicans denigrating the local Indian population - for example "You eat like an Indian!" (chuckle chuckle). Whenever I asked my students how much native "blood" they had, they would look embarassed and claim that they were white Spaniards, and "just a little" Indian. The book "A Vagabond in Mexico" also makes mention of an encounter the author had, where the locals all deny any "contamination" with Indian heritage, in spite of the fact that that brown skin they had didn't get imported from Spain.
This book give the impression that the Spanish influence of racism got removed once Mexico became independent of Spain. Hardly. If you've ever noticed, there is barely one president of Mexico who is of native blood. Most of the people in the upper echelons of politics, business, and show business in Mexico are clearly white Hispanics, with maybe just a little race mixing. And all those Mexican cocoa cereal boxes with the black face on the cover, Mexican kids making fun of blacks because they "look funny" - you can't tell me that Mexico doesn't have some serious race issues to contend with.
My Mexican friends came to my "rescue" when they found out that a Chinese guy I met there was interested in me. "Not good for you.", they told me.
Mexicans now living in America seem to think that they have a right to take over California because of their "Aztec" heritage. Aztecs were not the majority of the tribes in pre-hispanic Mexico, and certainly never made it into California. What makes this idea even weirder is the fact that the average Mexican does not identify with any tribe, but considers himself European. And last time I looked, the Comanches were the people who originally inhabited California, not the Aztecs.
All of this just goes to show how screwball politcal correctness is.
America tends to get blamed for all the race ills of the world -I think it would help if people did a little traveling (I've been to about 50 countries, and lived in 2 long-term), that they would see racism as a world-wide issue and not just as an American one. America is at least trying to work its problems out. Other countries sweep them under the carpet - cases in point - India, with its caste system based in part on skin color and its frequent religious riots, and Japan, where there has been discrimination against the native Ainu (a caucasoid race), ethnic Koreans born in Japan (the govt. refuses to grant them citizenship), foreigners in general, and oddly enough, against the Burakumin, who are native Japanese.
There obviously hasn't been a whole lot of legwork in terms of actual in-the-field research in this book, just a rehashing of "facts" from other politically correct tomes. Thus, the information is flawed. 2 stars.