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Paperback An Account, Much Abbreviated, of the Destruction of the Indies: And Related Texts Book

ISBN: 0872206254

ISBN13: 9780872206250

An Account, Much Abbreviated, of the Destruction of the Indies: And Related Texts

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Book Overview

Bartolom de Las Casas was the first and fiercest critic of Spanish colonialism in the New World. An early traveller to the Americas who sailed on one of Columbus's voyages, Las Casas was so horrified... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

4 ratings

Good read

This first person account of the aftermath of Columbus and the Spanish is an important read from the time period. When so much has been misleading about the time period, at least form a public school textbook view, I found this book a necessary view of reality. Granted, the author completely agreed that the "natives" needed God, but he finally learned that the violence that accompanied the Spanish did not bring the Americans closer to God.

an important and terrifying work

There's certainly no denying the importance of de Las Casas' written account of the atrocities committed by the Spanish against the native inhabitants of Central and South America. Not only is the author's account moving and heart-breaking, but it's impact on the course of world events and public opinion have been quite profound (whether or not most people realize it). If you're an anthropology, history or social science student, you should definitely read this book. For the lay reader though, here is a word of caution: this isn't a personnal narrative about Las Casas' life in "the new world" or an ethnography. Focusing on the various kingdoms and territories destroyed by the Spanish, Las Casas uses a very standard format: the Spanish arrive, are treated with kindness by the native people, and then kill/rob/enslave anyone they can get their hands on. The accounts Las Casas provides are terrifying and tragic, yet they can become quite repetative. It's important to bear in mind that this book is the work of a humanitarian who wanted desperately to halt the brutality he saw happening around him; this is not a work of fiction meant to entertain. If you can look at this book for what it is, I think you can appreciate it.

Sweepingly urgent

Thanks in no small part to historians such as Howard Zinn, the words and images recorded by Bartolome de Las Casas are becoming more and more well-known to the general public. This short book is the ideal synopsis of Las Casas' work and attitudes. He writes with an almost palpable trembling while recording atrocity after atrocity visited upon the natives in America by the Spanish conquistadores. The translation is excellent and flows easily, making Las Casas' words all the more insistent and urgent. Most importantly, this book offers the reader a different understanding of the role Columbus and his successors played in the "New World." Even if readers do not agree with the conclusions drawn by Las Casas and succeeding social historians, the "Short Account" nonetheless provides a much needed perspective on the interaction between the Spanish and the natives--an interaction that has been insipidly named the "Columbian exchange" but in reality was only the prelude to massive genocidal fury. The "Short Account," written in the white heat of passion and anger, can devolve occassionally into pejoratives and ad hominems, but as the American abolitionist William Lloyd Garrison once said to critics: "I am aware that some object to the severity of my language, but is there not cause for severity?" Anyone with interest in American, European colonial, or native history should familiarize themselves with Las Casas; the "Short Account" is the best introduction available.

An insightful book

Bartolome was a priest in the new world and the book in an attempt to show the abuses that the Spaniards committed against the indians and the damages done in the name of Gad and the King. This book is a historiography, but well written and a quick read. It presents a new facet of the conquest and is a direct contrast to the writings of Cortes.
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