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Sagecoyote@bookwyrm.social

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Charles C. Mann: 1491 (Paperback, 2006, Vintage)

A groundbreaking study that radically alters our understanding of the Americas before the arrival of …

Disappointing mainstream hit

I braced myself for a somewhat limited perspective given this book is 20 years old and a mainstream hit, but even then I was disappointed. The author does a decent-enough job at describing in rich detail Indigenous American cultures and lives. However, he does little to place in social context the genocidal and forcefully destructive European "contact", glossing over historical anthropological accounts as "offensive by today's standards but socially acceptable at the time". He dances around the genocidal impact, never once calling it genocide by name, and taking great lengths to excuse the contact as primarily caused by disease inadvertently, with a only a footnote cautioning readers to not take his argument as support for white supremacist arguments of "genetic superiority" (following a long tradition of manipulating medical science to "accidentally" justify Euro-dominance). The author occasionally veers into the 20th explorer tropes of disgust, casually mentioning cannibalism intended to shock …

Kim MacQuarrie: The Last Days of the Incas (2007, Simon & Schuster)

Adventurous with Eurocentric bias

Well-researched description of the Spanish invasion and decimation of the Incan empire, which had only just conquered and consolidated several other South American tribals groups at the time of Spanish arrival. The author tries to present an unbiased and balanced view but ultimately, many prejudices and default Western assumptions come through, along with at dismissing and minimizing the cruelty of Spanish conquest particularly with regards to Indigenous women (calling them "concubines" or "mistresses"). An easy mainstream read nonetheless.

Elizabeth Kolbert: Under A White Sky (Hardcover, 2021, Crown)

Elizabeth Kolbert takes a hard look at the new world we are creating. Along the …

Review of 'Under A White Sky' on 'Goodreads'

Disappointing techno-utopian view that barely engages critically with the serious implications of the recursive logic of these capitalist interventions aimed at maintaining the status quo, and repackages defeatist responses as hopeful salvation.