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1959: The Year Everything Changed

ePub 1959: The Year Everything Changed by Fred Kaplan in History

Description

In 1766; shortly after France ceded a vast expanse of North America to Britain; Captain Jonathan Carver undertook the first exploration of the wilderness in the service of the Crown. He set off from the straits between lakes Huron and Michigan; intending to befriend the Indians; map the land; and discover the elusive Northwest Passage that led to India. He spent three years canoeing and trekking through the region around the Great Lakes and the Mississippi River; covered thousands of miles; and returned with journals that were to become one of the most unusual books in travel literature. With a keen eye for detail; he recorded the pristine beauty of the land; its magnificent flora and fauna; and its incredible abundance of wildlife. His descriptions of Sioux government; religion; food; games; hunting; and clothing comprise the most complete account we have of the life; customs; and manners of the Plains Indians before they were altered by contact with the Europeans. Published posthumously in 1778; the captain's journal was the first popular American travel book and an international bestseller. This edition; with a biographical essay on Jonathan Carver by Norman Gelb; restores an American classic to its deserved place on the bookshelf.


#699054 in Books Fred Kaplan 2010-04-01Original language:EnglishPDF # 1 8.46 x .92 x 6.32l; .89 #File Name: 0470602031344 pages1959 The Year Everything Changed


Review
0 of 0 people found the following review helpful. It was a very good year?By Phillip SkagaKaplan makes an excellent case the year 1959 was one; if not ‘the’; turning point for subsequent decades of USA history. The book is clearly an introduction to forces leading up to what happened in 1960 and rest of the decade. Among other things the USA dominant position in international affairs includes much of what happened in 1959. He writes history as literature including insights typically not found in more traditional historians such as Paul Johnson. Johnson’s “Modern Times” hypothesizes that relativity theory spread as a forceful idea effectively permuting subsequent socio-cultural and economic patterns of world history. Johnson’s book covers history from 1919 to 1979 compared to one year for Kaplan. ‘1959’ is essentially only concerned with historical experiences in the USA. The thesis of Kaplan’s book is stated in early pages as “A feeling took hold that the breakdown of barriers in space; speed and time made other barriers ripe for transgressing.” This is directly comparable to the first chapter in Johnson’s book “Modern Times” which articulates events confirming relativity dating from physical measurements made in the critical year 1919. “It was”; Johnson states; “as though the globe had been taken off its axis and cast adrift in a universe which no longer conformed to accustomed standards of measurements.” It was felt there were; therefore; few or perhaps no standards for measuring all human behavior any more. Reading Kaplan (2008) and Johnson (1992) together is not a bad idea though Kaplan is the more current and fluent of the two. Robert; another Kaplan; also writes (“The Coming Anarchy”) from a different piont of view about threats of nation-state disintegration he traces to tribalism and sectarianism. Both of these are consequences; and as well as influences; of events in 1959; 1919 and subsequent worldwide socio-politco-economic changes of every ilk. A common thread in all of these books is technology which; for the curious; leads to reading many other books being published distinctly establishing power of technology to influence everything in human life as well as the environment. While there is much to be gained by reading all three of these books selecting just “1959” supplies a broader discussion of all diverse and complex forces affecting the world today begun in a single year The most important element left out of these books is climate change. Tracing exact influences between climate and socio-politico-economic forces is more complex but are clearly definable vector forces as in corporate drive to capture large segments of earth’s surface for the mineral values. Explicit and elementary actions damaging localities as in eastern USA coal or Peruvian copper mines for example.0 of 0 people found the following review helpful. If you never thought how important 1959 was; just read this book!By Robert V. Rose; retired education researcherI finished my premed studies; and spent the summer in Germany. I had never thought that it was a pivotal year; but Kaplan mentions so many. Birth control pills; Castro came to power; JFK announced his big campaign; microchip invented; "New Frontier"; Motown; Malcolm X; radiotelescopes; Edsel; Toyota all new names; Guggenheim museum opens.So I think I'm now convinced. It WAS a pivotal year.2 of 2 people found the following review helpful. More like How Everything in NYC ChangedBy E. KingGiven the wealth of things that actually occurred at the end of the 50's; it's too bad that the author spends so much time talking about how what happened in NYC was part of the events that chaged everything. Started out ok; but after awhile; I was tired of reading about the Village and the beatniks. Read David Halberstam's The Fifties. That's a great read about the 50's and how events changed the world.

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