Imagen del autor

James Daugherty (1)

Autor de The Landing of the Pilgrims

Para otros autores llamados James Daugherty, ver la página de desambiguación.

James Daugherty (1) se ha aliado con James Henry Daugherty.

21+ Obras 5,718 Miembros 29 Reseñas

Sobre El Autor

Créditos de la imagen: wikipedia

Obras de James Daugherty

Obras relacionadas

Las obras han sido aliasadas en James Henry Daugherty.

The Gettysburg Address (1863) — Ilustrador, algunas ediciones780 copias
Abe Lincoln Grows Up (1926) — Ilustrador, algunas ediciones606 copias
Sir Nigel (Avatares 23) (1906) — Ilustrador, algunas ediciones493 copias
Daniel Boone, Wilderness Scout (1922) — Ilustrador, algunas ediciones310 copias
Better Known as Johnny Appleseed (1950) — Ilustrador — 91 copias
The Railroad To Freedom: A Story of the Civil War (1932) — Ilustrador — 46 copias
A promise to our country: "I pledge allegiance ..." (1961) — Ilustrador, algunas ediciones18 copias
Windows on Henry Street (1934) — Ilustrador — 6 copias
Writing Books for Boys and Girls (1952) — Contribuidor, algunas ediciones5 copias
The Connecticut Cookbook — Ilustrador, algunas ediciones2 copias

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Miembros

Reseñas

 
Denunciada
Mustygusher | otra reseña | Dec 19, 2022 |
Daugherty’s heroically illustrated biography of Boone is a paean to his subject’s resourcefulness, skill, and determination and to life of English pioneers and settlers as they became Americans and expanded the bounds of the United States westward beyond the Appalachian mountains. Or to put it in contemporary terms, a poetically phrased saga of settler colonialism, white supremacy, and genocide. The indigenous inhabitants of the land are portrayed as brutal enemies in both prose and portraiture, unless they are aiding an explorer, and as noble savages but only after they have been extinguished. In this book when Indians attack and butcher whites, it was barbaric, but when whites employ exactly the same tactics on Indians it is heroic.

Putting this book in its historical context, Daniel Boone was awarded the Newbery medal in 1940, a time when Americans feared a war with, ironically, some white skinned savages in the process of conquering large parts of Europe, and their oriental allies where doing much the same in Asia, and in a time when the ideology of racism and eugenics was a large part of white America’s ideaology. Not surprisingly, the book is currently out of print.
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Denunciada
MaowangVater | 4 reseñas más. | Sep 27, 2021 |
I'm sure this was intended to inspire children and get them interested in history. James Daugherty hero-worshipped Daniel Boone, and this is clearly intended to be a story of the legend, not the man. He describes Boone's burning of Indian towns and villages as if they are heroic actions. The description of an Indian woman with a bow and arrow trying to protect her loved ones in a long house was particularly disturbing. The white men shot her 20 times and set the building on fire, burning alive the 46 men inside. The burning child dragging himself through the street didn't seem to be a problem for him either. The nearly constant references to "red varmints,""red dogs," "savage demons," etc. made the book extremely difficult to read.

In 1940 this was deemed the best of the best of children's literature. Thank goodness times have changed. This does not belong in any children's classroom.
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½
 
Denunciada
Tarawyn | 4 reseñas más. | Oct 3, 2020 |
This book has been a favorite of mine for years.
 
Denunciada
DianeVogan | 10 reseñas más. | Mar 18, 2020 |

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Estadísticas

Obras
21
También por
12
Miembros
5,718
Popularidad
#4,321
Valoración
3.9
Reseñas
29
ISBNs
59
Idiomas
2

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