The Earth Shall Weep: A History of Native America

The European “discovery” and conquest of America was one of the most cataclysmic events in history, leading to the wholesale destruction of millions of people and hundreds of flourishing societies. As far as history books are concerned, Native Americans have been secondary to an essentially Euro-American story. Now, James Wilson presents a rigorously authoritative, beautifully written, comprehensive history that-as Richard Gott wrote in the London Literary Review-“places the `Native Americans' at the center of the historical stage, abandoning the traditional version of the American past in which the `Indians' had a subservient role on the periphery of someone else's epic.”

The Earth Shall Weep is a groundbreaking book with a pioneering approach that sets it apart from any history now on the market. Drawing not only on historical sources but also on ethnography, archaeology, Indian oral tradition, and his own extensive research in Native American communities, James Wilson sets out to make the Indian perspective on the past and the present accessible to a broad audience. He charts the collision course between indigenous cultures and European invaders, from the first English settlements on the Atlantic coast to the Wounded Knee massacre of 1890, explaining how Europeans justified a process that reduced the Native American population from an estimated seven to ten million to less than 250,000 in just four centuries. Finally, as The Independent on Sunday noted, “whereas most accounts of the North American Indian take the Wounded Knee massacre as constituting, in the words of Black Elk, an end to the Indian experience on the continent, James Wilson pursues the story further into the twentieth century and up to the present day.” Wilson shows how old ideas about native people have continued to underpin government policy and popular perception in the twentieth century, leaving a painful legacy of ignorance and misunderstanding.

The story of Native America is the invisible subtext to every American history book ever published. James Wilson's splendid tour de force of narrative history redresses the historical balance and sets the standard for work to come.

“A sweeping, well-written, long-view history of American Indian societies ... a trustworthy telling of a sad epic of misunderstanding, mayhem, and massacre.”-Kirkus Reviews (starred)

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The Earth Shall Weep: A History of Native America

The European “discovery” and conquest of America was one of the most cataclysmic events in history, leading to the wholesale destruction of millions of people and hundreds of flourishing societies. As far as history books are concerned, Native Americans have been secondary to an essentially Euro-American story. Now, James Wilson presents a rigorously authoritative, beautifully written, comprehensive history that-as Richard Gott wrote in the London Literary Review-“places the `Native Americans' at the center of the historical stage, abandoning the traditional version of the American past in which the `Indians' had a subservient role on the periphery of someone else's epic.”

The Earth Shall Weep is a groundbreaking book with a pioneering approach that sets it apart from any history now on the market. Drawing not only on historical sources but also on ethnography, archaeology, Indian oral tradition, and his own extensive research in Native American communities, James Wilson sets out to make the Indian perspective on the past and the present accessible to a broad audience. He charts the collision course between indigenous cultures and European invaders, from the first English settlements on the Atlantic coast to the Wounded Knee massacre of 1890, explaining how Europeans justified a process that reduced the Native American population from an estimated seven to ten million to less than 250,000 in just four centuries. Finally, as The Independent on Sunday noted, “whereas most accounts of the North American Indian take the Wounded Knee massacre as constituting, in the words of Black Elk, an end to the Indian experience on the continent, James Wilson pursues the story further into the twentieth century and up to the present day.” Wilson shows how old ideas about native people have continued to underpin government policy and popular perception in the twentieth century, leaving a painful legacy of ignorance and misunderstanding.

The story of Native America is the invisible subtext to every American history book ever published. James Wilson's splendid tour de force of narrative history redresses the historical balance and sets the standard for work to come.

“A sweeping, well-written, long-view history of American Indian societies ... a trustworthy telling of a sad epic of misunderstanding, mayhem, and massacre.”-Kirkus Reviews (starred)

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The Earth Shall Weep: A History of Native America

The Earth Shall Weep: A History of Native America

by James Wilson

Narrated by Nelson Runger

Unabridged — 21 hours, 46 minutes

The Earth Shall Weep: A History of Native America

The Earth Shall Weep: A History of Native America

by James Wilson

Narrated by Nelson Runger

Unabridged — 21 hours, 46 minutes

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Overview

The European “discovery” and conquest of America was one of the most cataclysmic events in history, leading to the wholesale destruction of millions of people and hundreds of flourishing societies. As far as history books are concerned, Native Americans have been secondary to an essentially Euro-American story. Now, James Wilson presents a rigorously authoritative, beautifully written, comprehensive history that-as Richard Gott wrote in the London Literary Review-“places the `Native Americans' at the center of the historical stage, abandoning the traditional version of the American past in which the `Indians' had a subservient role on the periphery of someone else's epic.”

The Earth Shall Weep is a groundbreaking book with a pioneering approach that sets it apart from any history now on the market. Drawing not only on historical sources but also on ethnography, archaeology, Indian oral tradition, and his own extensive research in Native American communities, James Wilson sets out to make the Indian perspective on the past and the present accessible to a broad audience. He charts the collision course between indigenous cultures and European invaders, from the first English settlements on the Atlantic coast to the Wounded Knee massacre of 1890, explaining how Europeans justified a process that reduced the Native American population from an estimated seven to ten million to less than 250,000 in just four centuries. Finally, as The Independent on Sunday noted, “whereas most accounts of the North American Indian take the Wounded Knee massacre as constituting, in the words of Black Elk, an end to the Indian experience on the continent, James Wilson pursues the story further into the twentieth century and up to the present day.” Wilson shows how old ideas about native people have continued to underpin government policy and popular perception in the twentieth century, leaving a painful legacy of ignorance and misunderstanding.

The story of Native America is the invisible subtext to every American history book ever published. James Wilson's splendid tour de force of narrative history redresses the historical balance and sets the standard for work to come.

“A sweeping, well-written, long-view history of American Indian societies ... a trustworthy telling of a sad epic of misunderstanding, mayhem, and massacre.”-Kirkus Reviews (starred)


Editorial Reviews

The Barnes & Noble Review
The subtitle of this book is "A History of Native America," but perhaps a better one would be "The Destruction of the Native American Peoples." For the story of the American Indians, once they came into contact with Europeans, is one of disease, battle, and loss. Lives and land were lost, but so was dignity, pride, and a thousands of years old way of life.

James Wilson notes that the first contact between Native people and explorers was friendly. In the 16th century, up and down the Eastern seaboard, French, Dutch, English, and Spanish boats landed, and were most often greeted by Natives bearing gifts of welcome. The beaver and fox pelts they offered became popular with the Europeans, and a profitable and congenial trade relationship was established, one that would last for a hundred years.

What was it that turned the relationship sour? Wilson details several factors that influenced Euro-Indian relations. For one thing, the religious fervor and military might that had driven the Crusades was looking for a new outlet. The "savages" of the New World seemed a likely target — like the Muslims of Europe, they had a religion and cultural practices that made them the Other, and the Holy Wars had heightened Christian Europeans' fear of the Other.

There were also the mercenary aims of the explorers and their investors. Not content to simply trade with the peoples of the New World, it became their goal to establish colonies, and thereby ownership of hunks of the land. This was an alien concept to Native Americans, who saw themselves as part of their environment and notasrulers of it. In American Indian culture, there was no drive to subjugate the earth; instead, the earth was treated with respect, cultivated enough to feed the Indians and no more. Explorers saw this as laziness; they couldn't understand why the Indians wouldn't grow as much produce as possible in order to sell it for a profit. But the idea of exploiting the land until it was dried up and barren was not only alien to Native Americans, it would have gone against their religious beliefs.

Wilson details the very different creation myths of the Europeans and the Indians, and why these myths set up a dichotomy between the two groups that could never be resolved. In the Judeo-Christian religion, man is expelled from Eden and condemned to subduing and exploiting the land for his survival. But for the Indians, there was no such expulsion. "In Native American stories, human beings are seen as an integral part of a 'natural' order which embraces the whole of creation.... Their destiny is not to change [the land] or move away from it but to maintain it according to the instructions they received 'long ago' from their creator or culture hero." Furthermore, tribes were used to more or less peacefully coexisting alongside other tribes with creation myths were different from their own. They believed that each tribe had its own unique relation to the land and therefore its own stories. When the Europeans came, the Indians had no problem living beside them in peace, though their beliefs were very different from their own. The Europeans, however, believed in the rightness of their religion, and if they were right, the Indians must be wrong.

Because of these wildly differing cultures, it took the Indians many years to understand why the white men often attacked them without any apparent provocation. During that time, those Natives who were not wiped out by European diseases, particularly smallpox, to which they had no resistance, were attacked, tortured, and killed in the name of the Christian God. The Indians' unfamiliar rites, as well as their unwillingness to farm the land to its greatest capacity, convinced the European invaders that they had a right to take the land and convert the Natives. That the Natives had no interest in being converted or in changing their way of life was of little interest to them.

The persecution of the Indians in New England would set the tone for treatment of Natives across the country. As westward expansion began, Native Americans were pushed further and further west, and their populations dwindled. As with species of birds and animals, the near-extinction of the American Indian brought with it the late lamentations of European-Americans, who then began to mythologize the nearly extinct people. The Native American warrior-hero has of late been replaced in the public imagination by the natural, mystical Native American, but neither stereotype tells us much about what it is like to be a Native American living in America today.

In his lively and thought-provoking book, James Wilson has compiled a staggering number of stories that make up the history of the Native Americans. Along the way, he has shattered many myths and even questioned the veracity of certain so-called "scientific facts." There is very little evidence, for instance, that the Indians' ancestors came to North America along the Bering Strait land bridge. It would, however, be too disruptive to Eurocentrism for us to believe that humans might have evolved in different places in the world. There is also evidence that there were many more than the conservatively estimated 2 million Natives before Europeans arrived; the smaller the number, however, the more easily assuaged the guilt we share in having wiped them out, and the more easily we can believe the lie that the land was really just ours for the taking.

Gail Jaitin

Richard Brookhiser

...[A] useful introduction to a rich subject....The wilyshapeshiftingcontradictoryheroic tricksterwhom many contemporary Indians regard as the key motif of Native American culturewill surprise us again. —National Review

Richard E. Nicholls

The litany of massacres, epidemics and forced migrations is exhausting but instructive, reminding the reader that the few famous battles that tend to be memorialized were in fact only a small part of a continent-wide effort, lasting for more than three centuries, to displace or eradicate Indian cultures.
The New York Times Book Review

Padgett

Wilson writes authoritatively and with keen insight, combining a broad range of historical, archaeological and anthropological sources with a knowledge of Indian oral traditions, the published views of contemporary Indians and the conclusions of his own interviews...All in all, this is an impressive book that deserves a wide readership.
The Times Literary Supplement

Kirkus Reviews

A sweeping, well-written, long-view history of American Indian societies. Wilson, a British writer for television and radio documentaries, does a creditable job of interpreting the Native American past and present for his intended European readers, although he misses a few references that are familiar to Americans and has to explain a few others that we take for granted on these shores. But mostly, he gets it right—while also taking up some themes that American scholars have overlooked, especially European Enlightenment views of the "noble savage" and ideas that some unknown historical force propelled the European conquerors of America to "subdue the wilderness and supplant the `Indian"' —who, those views had it, was somehow stuck at a lower stage of cultural development than any enjoyed by the newcomers. Although he relies heavily on the work of revisionist historians, such as the Sioux scholar Vine Deloria, Wilson takes care to examine a wide range of scholarly materials (about which he offers some nicely barbed commentary); based on these sources, he reconsiders such matters as the Indian population of North America at the time of the European arrival, which he believes has been seriously underestimated in number by some millions of inhabitants. Wilson sometimes falls into confusion, as do many of his American counterparts, when dealing with such notoriously complex subjects as the fluid post-WWII status of Indian nations vis-à-vis the federal government; and he misses several important events in recent Indian news, such as the revival of the American Indian Movement in the mid-1990s. But in the main, his is a trustworthy telling of a sad epic of misunderstanding,mayhem, and massacre. .

Product Details

BN ID: 2940171052775
Publisher: Recorded Books, LLC
Publication date: 10/14/2011
Edition description: Unabridged
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