Pursuing the flourishing life and human liberty through literature.
"Once you learn to read, you will be forever free." - Frederick Douglass
Monday, January 1, 2018
Announcing: Peoples of the Americas
In the past few years I've explored the Middle East and Asia; for 2018, I am moving closer to home with "Peoples of the Americas". With it, I hope to remedy my ignorance of the United States' southern neighbors (save Mexico and Cuba), as well as learn about a few native American tribes who are a blank to me...the Chinook being one example.
The plan: open the year by visiting a few Amerindian tribes in North America, move into a treatment of the Aztec, Maya, and Inca, and then follow up with histories of various nations in the Caribbean, as well as Central and South America. If time permits, we may even visit that most exotic of American nations, Canada.
Although this, along with the Classics Club, will be my focus this year, I'm just going to fool around in January and ease into the new year with light reading in the form of Star Trek, books on cities, that kind of thing.
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Looking forward to it. Coincidentally I'll have a review of S. American/Caribbean history coming up soon (2 books away) plus I recently finished the first book in a City triple.....
ReplyDeleteThat is an interesting coincidence. I don't think South America has come up at all for me, besides "The Motorcycle Diaries" years ago. (2007, I think. Wow.)
DeleteSouth America isn't really on my radar at all. As you know I'm concentrating on British & European history so...... My next foreign 'trips' in literature will be Russia & China. I'm still itching to do something in the Middle East and have already picked up 6, 8 or 10 books on the region. But, as always, so many subjects, so many books & so little time....
DeleteThank you, Tim! I will look forward to your thoughtful responses.
ReplyDeleteOh, great topic! This is also an area I haven't read much about, though from taking a class on Latin American history, I remember there's some fascinating stories in the 19th-20th centuries. Looking forward to your reviews.
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