drwitz
Living the dream in Florida!
- Joined
- Jan 31, 2008
- Messages
- 292
Moved quickly through the next three. Two more in my exploration of race, privilege and history, and one for my love of Disney Parks.
11. The Second Founding: How the Civil War and Reconstruction Remade the Constitution by Eric Foner
Eric Foner is a professor a Columbia University whose work is specifically focused on Reconstruction. I remember in high school history (which, admittedly, I took in Mt. Pleasant, SC) that Reconstruction was taught as a period when bad Northerners (i.e. carpetbaggers and scalawags) came south to take advantage of the war-ravaged and recovering (white) southerners. Needless to say, it was a biased high school education! In my work to relearn American history, and specifically this period, I am reading some pieces on Reconstruction. This is the first. Foner discusses the history behind the adoption of the 13th, 14th and 15th amendments by reviewing the process of their adoption, the historical arguments for and against each, the legal impacts of them, and their historic legacy. Foner makes a compelling case that these three amendments to the Constitution remade America. This is a well-written and compelling corrective (in part) to the "history" I was taught.
12. Nothing But Freedom: Emancipation and Its Legacy by Eric Foner
One of Foner's earlier works, this is a more dry and academic text, but still worth reading. Broken into three essays, the first looks at the history of other Western Hemisphere Emancipations other than the one in the US (eg. Jamaica, Haiti, etc.), the second chapter tells the story of US Emancipation and Reconstruction focused on the politics and power dynamics post Civil War, and the third chapter tells of a particular riot of former slaves on rice plantations in Low Country South Carolina to show the impacts of these changes at a local level. I did learn a lot from these chapters and I look forward to reading more from Foner in the future.
13. Boundless Realm: Deep Explorations Inside Disney's Haunted Mansion by Foxx Nolte
There is something wonderfully appropriate about this being book 13 for this year! What a fun exploration of the themes and details in the Haunted Mansion attraction. A complete review of the attraction itself (with plenty of details I never noticed), this is also a history of the attraction and a deep study of its antecedents and legacy. Well-researched and well-documented (the footnotes are fun to read just by themselves), this is a must-have for any serious Haunted Mansion enthusiast. Highly recommended!
More great books to add to the list. For the Disney-fans among us (isn't that all of us?), especially pay attention to the last two.
14. A Shot in the Moonlight: How a Freed Slave and a Confederate Soldier Fought for Justice in the Jim Crow South by Ben Montgomery
An unusual true story that took place in Kentucky during the post-war period. George Dinning was a former slave who, during self-defense of his home from an armed mob, shot and killed a white man who was the son of a wealthy landowner in the area. You may think you know where this story goes, but you will be surprised. The book reads like a novel, but every word is true!
15. The New Jim Crow: Mass Incarceration in the Age of Colorblindness -- 10th Anniversary Edition by Michelle Alexander, with a new preface by the author.
This book makes a convincing argument that our current system of mass incarceration of African-American men is itself a new form of segregation. There is a review of the legacy of the War on Drugs, police department actions, and legal precedents that have moved us far down the path as a country towards segregated spaces. Worth a read, and very interesting!
16. and 17. Marc Davis in His Own Words: Imagineering the Disney Theme Parks Volumes I and II by Pete Docter and Christopher Merritt
This is a massive two volume series is a loving tribute and testimonial to the amazing legacy of Imagineer Marc Davis. Davis was one of Disney's Nine Old Men, his best animators who first worked with him in the Disney company, and was responsible for so much of what so many of us think of as classic Disney attractions and their classic look. This collection explores a number of these attractions -- including Pirates, the Tiki Room, the Jungle Cruise, the Haunted Mansion -- and some attractions and ideas that never were realized through a myriad of photographs, interviews and Marc's own words. This is a MUST READ for any true Disney Parks enthusiast. I checked mine out from the library. Now I need to save my pennies to buy my own copy. The books are coffee-table size and beautiful keepsakes that (once I buy them) I am sure I will return to again and again.
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