An In-Depth Examination of the Methodical American Dispossession of Native Americans in the South
5 stars
Claudio Saunt narrows the focus of Native American dispossession in modern day Georgia and Florida during the Andrew Jackson administration, and that focus provides a harrowing account of a racially-driven dispossession machinery in unprecedented detail. It's hard to read some of these accounts and not see echoes of them in Nazism and other bureaucracy-driven genocides in the following years - the huge administration that was stood up to deport Native Americans, the strict accounting processes and budgets, and the dehumanization of an entire people.
Saunt deftly mixes first hand written accounts, historical records, and statistics to provide a holistic perspective on this tragedy. The juxtaposition of atrocities with current cities and attractions in Georgia and Florida is jarring, with the lack of American acknowledgement made that much more difficult to comprehend. While this is a tough read, it should be required reading for those who want to better understand a …
Claudio Saunt narrows the focus of Native American dispossession in modern day Georgia and Florida during the Andrew Jackson administration, and that focus provides a harrowing account of a racially-driven dispossession machinery in unprecedented detail. It's hard to read some of these accounts and not see echoes of them in Nazism and other bureaucracy-driven genocides in the following years - the huge administration that was stood up to deport Native Americans, the strict accounting processes and budgets, and the dehumanization of an entire people.
Saunt deftly mixes first hand written accounts, historical records, and statistics to provide a holistic perspective on this tragedy. The juxtaposition of atrocities with current cities and attractions in Georgia and Florida is jarring, with the lack of American acknowledgement made that much more difficult to comprehend. While this is a tough read, it should be required reading for those who want to better understand a formative part of American and world history and gain perspective on current attempts to repeat it. Highly recommend