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New York Times Bestseller Now part of the HBO docuseries "Exterminate All the Brutes," written and directed by Raoul Peck Recipient of the American Book Award The first history of the United States told from the perspective of indigenous peoples Today in the United States, there are more than five hundred federally recognized Indigenous nations comprising nearly three million people, descendants of the fifteen million Native people who once inhabited this land. The centuries-long genocidal program of the US settler-colonial regimen has largely been omitted from history. Now, for the first time, acclaimed historian and activist Roxanne Dunbar-Ortiz offers a history of the United States told from the perspective of Indigenous peoples and reveals how Native Americans, for centuries, actively resisted expansion of the US empire. With growing support for movements such as the campaign to abolish Columbus Day and replace it with Indigenous Peoplesโ Day and the Dakota Access Pipeline protest led by the Standing Rock Sioux Tribe, An Indigenous Peoplesโ History of the United States is an essential resource providing historical threads that are crucial for understanding the present. In An Indigenous Peoplesโ History of the United States , Dunbar-Ortiz adroitly challenges the founding myth of the United States and shows how policy against the Indigenous peoples was colonialist and designed to seize the territories of the original inhabitants, displacing or eliminating them. And as Dunbar-Ortiz reveals, this policy was praised in popular culture, through writers like James Fenimore Cooper and Walt Whitman, and in the highest offices of government and the military. Shockingly, as the genocidal policy reached its zenith under President Andrew Jackson, its ruthlessness was best articulated by US Army general Thomas S. Jesup, who, in 1836, wrote of the Seminoles: โThe country can be rid of them only by exterminating them.โ Spanning more than four hundred years, this classic bottom-up peoplesโ history radically reframes US history and explodes the silences that have haunted our national narrative. An Indigenous Peoples' History of the United States is a 2015 PEN Oakland-Josephine Miles Award for Excellence in Literature. Review: ๐ชถโญ๏ธThe Essential, Unflinching Corrective to American History!โญ๏ธ๐ชถ - ๐ชถ'An Indigenous Peoples' History of the United States' by Roxanne Dunbar-Ortiz is not simply an alternative history book; it is a foundational, necessary, and utterly transformative piece of scholarship that deserves to be read by every single person who wants to understand the true nature of the American experiment. This book is a gut-punch of clarity, earning a rare 5 out of 5 stars for its profound historical contribution, meticulous research, and powerful narrative voice! โญ๏ธThe Definitive Reframing of US History! What makes this book essential is the author's relentless and rigorous focus on the Indigenous perspective. Dunbar-Ortiz completely dismantles the pervasive "founding myth" of the United States as a glorious, divinely ordained nation built on empty land. She replaces this narrative with the undeniable truth that the U.S. was founded as a settler-colonial state, and its expansion was a centuries-long, systematic program of genocide and land dispossession. ๐ชถSettler-Colonialism: The book clearly and unequivocally establishes that U.S. policy towards Indigenous nations was not a series of unfortunate accidents or regrettable frontier skirmishes. It was a deliberate, ideological, and often brutal effort to eliminate the original inhabitants in order to seize their territory. โญ๏ธChallenging the Canon: By revealing the truth of this "way of war" from the colonial era through the 20th century, Dunbar-Ortiz forces the reader to confront the reality that many of the celebrated figures and events in U.S. history are directly tied to these extermination policies. ๐ชถUnflinching Scholarship and Emotional Impact: Upon research I discovered that Dunbar-Ortiz, is a renowned historian and activist, synthesizes vast amounts of scholarship plenty capable of creating a chronological and coherent history! โญ๏ธMeticulous Documentation: The writing is supported by extensive research, drawing heavily on Indigenous voices, treaties, government documents, and the words of the colonizers themselves. This makes the argument unassailable; the facts speak for themselves. ๐ชถA Painful but Necessary Read: Be forewarned!! This book is intensely difficult to read at times due to the sheer volume of injustice and calculated violence described. However, it descends into melodrama. Her tone is one of fierce, unwavering truth-telling that is vital for achieving an honest understanding of the past. โญ๏ธConnecting Past to Present: Crucially, the book doesn't end in the 19th century. It draws a clear, straight line from the policies of settler-colonialism to modern issues of militarism, resource exploitation, and the continued struggle for Indigenous sovereignty and self-determination. ๐ชถThe Value of the Book: This is not a book for someone looking for comfort; itโs a book for someone looking for truth. It should be a book of MANDITORY reading for all high schools and colleges across the country. It is a work of intellectual integrity that provides the necessary context for understanding the cultural, political, and social landscape of the United States today. If you are serious about understanding history beyond the myths, about reckoning with America's origins, and about honoring the resistance and perseverance of the Indigenous peoples, you must read this book. It's a permanent fixture in my library! โญ๏ธโญ๏ธโญ๏ธโญ๏ธโญ๏ธ Review: Read it. - Everyone should read this! excellent work. This put so much in perspective. Dunbar Ortiz is an excellent author and historian. Highly recommend this one. Made it in top 5 nonfiction. Kinzerโs works complement this one well.
| Best Sellers Rank | #7,916 in Books ( See Top 100 in Books ) #2 in Native American Demographic Studies #6 in Indigenous History #10 in Native American History (Books) |
| Customer Reviews | 4.7 out of 5 stars 5,373 Reviews |
๏ฟฝ**๏ฟฝ
๐ชถโญ๏ธThe Essential, Unflinching Corrective to American History!โญ๏ธ๐ชถ
๐ชถ'An Indigenous Peoples' History of the United States' by Roxanne Dunbar-Ortiz is not simply an alternative history book; it is a foundational, necessary, and utterly transformative piece of scholarship that deserves to be read by every single person who wants to understand the true nature of the American experiment. This book is a gut-punch of clarity, earning a rare 5 out of 5 stars for its profound historical contribution, meticulous research, and powerful narrative voice! โญ๏ธThe Definitive Reframing of US History! What makes this book essential is the author's relentless and rigorous focus on the Indigenous perspective. Dunbar-Ortiz completely dismantles the pervasive "founding myth" of the United States as a glorious, divinely ordained nation built on empty land. She replaces this narrative with the undeniable truth that the U.S. was founded as a settler-colonial state, and its expansion was a centuries-long, systematic program of genocide and land dispossession. ๐ชถSettler-Colonialism: The book clearly and unequivocally establishes that U.S. policy towards Indigenous nations was not a series of unfortunate accidents or regrettable frontier skirmishes. It was a deliberate, ideological, and often brutal effort to eliminate the original inhabitants in order to seize their territory. โญ๏ธChallenging the Canon: By revealing the truth of this "way of war" from the colonial era through the 20th century, Dunbar-Ortiz forces the reader to confront the reality that many of the celebrated figures and events in U.S. history are directly tied to these extermination policies. ๐ชถUnflinching Scholarship and Emotional Impact: Upon research I discovered that Dunbar-Ortiz, is a renowned historian and activist, synthesizes vast amounts of scholarship plenty capable of creating a chronological and coherent history! โญ๏ธMeticulous Documentation: The writing is supported by extensive research, drawing heavily on Indigenous voices, treaties, government documents, and the words of the colonizers themselves. This makes the argument unassailable; the facts speak for themselves. ๐ชถA Painful but Necessary Read: Be forewarned!! This book is intensely difficult to read at times due to the sheer volume of injustice and calculated violence described. However, it descends into melodrama. Her tone is one of fierce, unwavering truth-telling that is vital for achieving an honest understanding of the past. โญ๏ธConnecting Past to Present: Crucially, the book doesn't end in the 19th century. It draws a clear, straight line from the policies of settler-colonialism to modern issues of militarism, resource exploitation, and the continued struggle for Indigenous sovereignty and self-determination. ๐ชถThe Value of the Book: This is not a book for someone looking for comfort; itโs a book for someone looking for truth. It should be a book of MANDITORY reading for all high schools and colleges across the country. It is a work of intellectual integrity that provides the necessary context for understanding the cultural, political, and social landscape of the United States today. If you are serious about understanding history beyond the myths, about reckoning with America's origins, and about honoring the resistance and perseverance of the Indigenous peoples, you must read this book. It's a permanent fixture in my library! โญ๏ธโญ๏ธโญ๏ธโญ๏ธโญ๏ธ
J**S
Read it.
Everyone should read this! excellent work. This put so much in perspective. Dunbar Ortiz is an excellent author and historian. Highly recommend this one. Made it in top 5 nonfiction. Kinzerโs works complement this one well.
R**D
Settler Colonialism
This book turns the world of grade school and high school American History on its head. It is a history written by an indigenous historian who clearly has a command of her material. The work could be considered a socio-historical or anthropo-historical presentation of the multiple tribes that were wiped out by the British colonists who settled the Americas. In fact, the author emphasizes the notion of settler colonialism, whose goal, she argues, is genocide. The author has written a very readable book that is packed with information about the real historical founding of the United States.
G**K
Good read
It is unbelievable what the Native Americans went thru with the Europeans. The were slaughtered or tortured if they did convert to Christianity. The Pope finally came a few years ago and apologized to the Native Americans though it was a few centuries too late and overdue. Good research and very informative but does get a little political toward the end of the book which is why I deducted a star.
D**N
Obama is not first president at permanent war
The New York Times recently claimed, and peace advocates repeated, that President Barack Obama will be the first U.S. president to have been at war for two complete four-year terms. It's also become common to refer to the current U.S. war on Afghanistan as the longest U.S. war ever. These ideas fit well with the universal activist demand that we return to the time of peace or the age of justice or the wisdom of the Founding Fathers or the era before superdelegates. This is all based on a fundamental misunderstanding of history, and of its uses and abuses for life. You cannot "take back our country!" because you never had it. There is no age of peace or justice to be returned to. The United States has been at war since before it was a United States, and formed itself as such in part in order to expand its western wars. One value of history is in fact to recognize how much better or worse or simply different things have been in other times and places. But the purpose of that is not to restore some better time. All past times thus far, each taken as a whole, have been horrendously awful. The purpose is to facilitate the rejection of the silly idea that we're stuck with whatever we happen to have in the way of a lifestyle at the moment. One can always find specific ways in which things were once better. Bush used to lie to Congress and get authorizations for wars. Obama just goes to war. But both are awful. The desire to end war was common in the 1920s. Now it's unthinkable for millions of U.S. citizens. But both frames of mind lacked an effective path to peace. One can always find specific ways in which things were once worse. The war on Vietnam and neighboring nations killed some 6 million people. The latest U.S. wars may have killed less than half of that. Teddy Roosevelt marketed wars as desirable means of building character and slaughtering lesser races. Barack Obama markets wars as philanthropic assistance to the places being bombed. But both kill just the same. In the perspective of the recent past, we should not be looking at Obama as the longest war president, but rather as a president who has added his bit to the normalization of war, to the restoration of permanent war as routine and unquestionable. It's not the length of his wars that stands out, but the number of them: seven significant wars that we know of, the 2001 AUMF used and misused for military actions in 14 countries, "special" forces active in 75 countries, troops permanently stationed in 175 countries -- and all of this with very little public or Congressional involvement or even awareness. Targeted and not-so-targeted assassinations, coups, and counter-insurgency operations stretch through the entire history of the United States, as do decades-long wars. To understand this, we have to begin thinking of Native Americans as real people, so that wars against them count as real wars. A good way to do this is by listening to Roxanne Dunbar-Ortiz. Read her book, An Indigenous People's History of the United States, or catch her interview on this week's Talk Nation Radio. Dunbar-Ortiz tells a story of endless genocidal war that employed settlers and their militias against the native people of North America in a manner not unlike Israel's use of settlers against the Palestinians. The first law created by the United States was the Northwest Ordinance, a "blueprint for gobbling up the British-protected Indian Territory." According to Dunbar-Ortiz, "documented policies of genocide on the part of U.S. administrations can be identified in at least four distinct periods: the Jacksonian era of forced removal; the California gold rush in Northern California; the Post-Civil War era of the so-called Indian wars in the Great Plains; and the 1950s termination period." Some of the settlers of the United States had previously settled Ireland, where the British had paid rewards for Irish heads and body parts, just as they would for Indian scalps. The United States for many years sought out immigrants who could settle on native land. The war on Mexico was not the first foreign war of the United States. The U.S. had attacked numerous Indian nations. Mexico was just one more in that string. With the land now filled, attitudes toward immigrants and toward the rest of the globe have shifted. "Indian Country," in the dialect of the U.S. military, refers to distant lands to be attacked with dozens of weapons named for Native American nations. John Yoo justified lawless imprisonment, now evolved into lawless murder by drone, with the ancient Roman concept of homo sacer, a person who must obey the government but whom the government or anyone else may kill. Yoo referred to past U.S. Supreme Court opinions upholding this category for Native Americans. The Indian was the original "terrorist." The United States did not go to war after reaching California. Rather it simply continued the war it had been in from the start. The United States didn't wage war for decades because of a communist threat and then for additional decades because of a terrorist threat. Rather, lies about Crazy Horse on the warpath (while he was in a reservation) evolved into lies about missile gaps which evolved into lies about incubators, WMDs, and Libyan Viagra. None of this makes war unendable. We can end it tomorrow if we choose. The unimaginative can check the history of other parts of the world that have engaged in war far less or not at all. But we will not bring the U.S. corner of the world under control until after we recognize what the problem is.
P**S
Should be a required read
This book didn't just teach me history; it introduced me to a continent. Roxanne Dunbar-Ortiz's meticulous, devastating work finally gave voice and depth to the countless Indigenous nations, like the Powhatan Confederacy, the Wampanoag, the Shawnee, the Lakota, the Dinรฉ, who are often reduced to footnotes or stereotypes in standard texts. She doesn't just mention them; she presents their political structures, their diplomacy, their resistance, and their worldviews with a scholar's care and an advocate's passion. Learning their specific stories, often for the first time, made the scale of the genocide not an abstract horror, but a series of countless, irreplaceable worlds destroyed. This is the history we were robbed of, masterfully restored.
C**M
Healing only happens when we teach alternative views
Exceptional historical analysis of the genocide of the native Americans and imperialist practices of the United States. A must read!
M**R
excellent reference that supports the global moral innovation framework
Humanity has not changed over the last 5-10,000 years. When we settled down to become farmers, we produced more food than we consumed, and four ancient civilizations dominated humanity 5,000 years ago - Egypt, Sumer, India and China. Egyptians enslaved Jews and evolved through the Roman Empire that officially adopted christianity in 380ce and became the 2.3 billion Christians worldwide today by migrating westward to Europe and the Americas, along with Africa that is shared with Muslims (who evolved through the Sumer-Amorites-Hittites-Persians-Ottoman route). Roxanne's book is a descriptive look at the U.S. History that details the genocide of the Native Americans under a nicer label of ethnic cleansing today. The tactics, attitude, use of Christianity backed up by military force form the core of the Innovator World of Christians who focus a lot more on innovations than morality. To sustain humanity, we must balance innovations with morality reflected in the universally accepted golden rule: Do unto others what you want others to do unto you. Especially in this age of Internet, no one can continue to hide behind Hollywood fantasies and brainwash our children through education that do not reflect reality. This book is refreshing, detailed, and very descriptive (albeit depressing at times). The content is available in bits in pieces everywhere. This is among the first attempts I know that integrate the pieces together as they relate to Native Americans. There are still a few missing pieces like the 1529 Treaty of Zaragoza was a complement to the 1494 Treaty of Tordesillas that defined the world as Spanish and Portuguese territory, only to encourage the innovative British empire to conceptualize a new type of entity called "company." The British East India Company started in 1600 partly to bypass the authority of the Pope, after they learned the tremendous wealth available in the New World especially after 1588 when the British defeated the Spanish Armada that was funded by the 20% royalty collected from all trades in the Americas. Native American history is an important piece of USA history as part of the global Christianity community component of the Christian, Muslim, Indian and Chinese communities that make up over 90% of humanity today and analyzed in the Moral Innovations framework. The key shortcoming of the book is what future actions to take. The last couple of pages address education, but descriptive education of the past is not enough. The value that should be taught to our children is to balance innovations with integrity by following the golden rule. There is too much of a disconnect if there is an abrupt introduction of a descriptive textbook of Native American history. It will take time and sustained effort to address and evaluate how USA must re-assess the push for global human rights when imperial USA abuses its own Native Americans who worked well with African American slaves during the civil war. USA is a great nation. It is driven by Protestant values and a core attribute is the American Dream which gives opportunities for the motivated to pursue success. This is becoming more difficult as the wealth gap widens. However, joining the pursuit of money by conforming to the abuse of fellow Native Americans should not be encouraged. Some schools teach tools of trade that ignores core values, but it is the core values such as moral innovations that sustain a great society like the USA. This book is a must read to start in that direction. Check out the blog moralinnovator.wordpress.com
B**S
Good for understanding black people
There are many stories about black people in America in this book. The white people really hurt them during the civil war. I feel bad for them. Decent book. Also they killed all the Natives but thats how you rule countries.
Y**E
An absolute must-read!
If you're really interested in History, you must read this book. We must face the lies we've built our modern way of thinking on, and this book will tear down many of the myths we've woven about the democratic, well intentions of our Western societies. If we don't face these truths, we'll continue doing what the indigenous peoples of America have suffered from for so long. And this is not very Christian. Nor democratic. Nor well intended.
S**S
Excellent incisive account
This book changed so many of my views of Native American history - taking stereotypical views of Native Americans and their diversity and showing how they were systematically cleared from the land by brute force , men women and children killed, crops burnt, livestock killed. Rather than scalping being something Indians did to the people it was white people who collected scalps for bounties. This book documents how treaties with Native Americans were systematically broken and how they were treated as inferior and needing to be exterminated. It is a shocking and much needed account.
C**.
A must read: helps understand the present colonialism of the Trump government in Greenland & Iceland
Great book. Bringing finally the truth about what the crimes settlers (guided by religious motivations!) committed against the Native Americans (500 Nations, your remember?). The genocide lasted centuries, as the "last frontier" moved further and further to the West, reaching finally the Pacific Ocean. And their land was stollen. Great explanations how the mindset persists in the present US politics and military. An eye opener. You'll never see the US, and the European settlers (maybe your/my ancestors?) in the same manner. History repeats and repeats ... What was worse: the Holocaust or this two-century long genocide? The book ends with very interesting perspectives into the present and future of the US. Awakes emotions and questioning as moving as "Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee", when not more ... Thanks to the wonderful work & investigations of the author. Very strong recommendation!
F**.
Educational and perhaps life changing
This is a remarkable book. It is much more than Native American history. The book is interesting to read. While it talks about historical facts, it keeps the reader engaged and always wanting more. The writer made some great analogies to modern policies and how past history is still being applied today. I did not always agree with the analogies, but the logic and the connections are undeniable. In many parts of the book, I wondered how I never heard of this before. On many occasions I had doubts that this is really what happened. Every time I checked with other references, all the facts in the book were proven true. This just testifies to how much I did not know about native history. Being an immigrant myself, I have always wondered why native history is not in the front page. Why is it not the first hall in our museums. My children learned very little about that history at school. In many parts of the book, I had to stop reading because it was hard to know about all these atrocities. Many of immigrants like myself, think we were never part of this genocide. Therefore, it is not our fault. I think if we did not pay attention to Native rights and struggles to have a decent life, then we are not as innocent as we claim.
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