Foggy wrote:
The book 1491 is the best work I've read on Pre-Columbian North and South America.
Me too. I came away from it realizing that not only had I known so little of Pre-Columbian North and South America that it was embarrassing, but also what I thought that I knew was severely flawed. Here I live in Connecticut, and I had no idea that the New England coast had been lined with native villages. I suspect few in Connecticut know that, as a matter of fact.
Mann's
1491 and
1493 are both based on intensive research as well as some personal observations. The last third of each book is basically devoted to documentation. The books are not full of footnotes as would be a scholarly text, but with the back of the book and the text, you too can read Mann's original sources. Crosby's
Columbian Exchange was the inspiration for both books; it is a readable scholarly work. The only book of that nature that I recall having read with such pleasure was Walter Prescott Webb's
The Great Plains: A Study in Institutions and Environment, which may have been the spark of my interest in the environment. Webb was killed in an automobile accident outside Austin while I was a student there and had been an abiding presence on campus even though (I think) he was retired. (The other presence was J. Frank Dobie, one of whose contributions was the declaration that the University of Texas Tower would be more appropriate for the Texas landscape if it were turned on its side.)
Friday, some friends and I are going to the Mashantucket Pequot Museum at Foxwoods -- not for the casino! Then we are darting over to see Bill Maher on stage at Mohegan Sun. I am told that I shall find the Museum to be humorous rather than a serious museum. In comparison to Vancouver, that will surely be true, but there is so much for me to learn about these almost-vanished people. I've participated in a bit of a movement to get a curriculum going here on the indigenous population of New England, mostly by grumpily asking various administrators why we didn't have one. I think that, in general, most Americans (including Latinos and African-Americans, not just whites) know far too little about the peoples whose land we took in our Manifest Destiny.