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Louis R. Harlan (1922–2010)

Auteur de Booker T. Washington: The Wizard of Tuskegee, 1901-1915

7+ oeuvres 178 utilisateurs 3 critiques

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Louis R. Harlan, Distinguished Professor of History at the University of Maryland

Comprend les noms: louis harlan, Harlan R. Louis

Œuvres de Louis R. Harlan

Oeuvres associées

Up from Slavery, Ascension d'un Esclave Emancipé (1901) — Introduction, quelques éditions4,257 exemplaires
W. E. B. Du Bois: Propagandist of the Negro Protest (1968) — Introduction, quelques éditions32 exemplaires

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Louis Harlan, later a respected historian, always felt that most war histories reflected the heroism of the conflicts, not the “self-serving amateur warriors [who were:] capable of thoughtless cruelty to those not part of our group. We hadn’t a clue as to where war was leading us. We were babes in the woods, adolescents awkwardly moving toward manhood. It would be an understatement to say we made mistakes. . . . The one great fault of midshipman’s school was that it taught us nothing about the sea.”

Harlan’s training was minimal. Like Paul Fussell, he became an officer by virtue of his exposure to college. Never much at the practical application of knowledge, he graduated in the lower half of his midshipman class and was assigned to LCI 555, a brand new “ship” designed to beach and unload infantry directly to shore. Only one man in the crew had ever been to sea. “The war would be a transforming experience for an entire generation of Americans, who would later remember it with a nostalgia not justified by the evidence.” His LCI saw action during D-Day and later in the Mediterranean, before being transferred to the Pacific and Eniwetok atoll in preparation for the anticipated invasion of Japan. The atomic bomb significantly altered this assignment, and they were sent to Vietnam, where his ship almost caused an international incident. They naively transported some French and British officers to shore — after all they were allies — only to discover they were secretly negotiating the discharge of French prisoners, who then formed the nucleus of the French army in Vietnam. The U.S. hands were not clean either. Harlan’s LCI’s role was to transfer several thousand Kuomintang troops to waiting Liberty ships for transport to northern China, where they were to fight the Chinese Communists. So we managed to offend one side in two civil wars almost simultaneously.

Harlan did note the devastation to the civilian population caused by the war and concomitant corruption. Food intended for the starving people was sold by warlords to the highest bidder, which meant it was often shipped away from poor areas in dire need of relief. Similarities and contrasts between Harlan and Fussell are interesting. Both were junior officers who perceived the stupidity and wastefulness of war, both went on the graduate academic careers courtesy of the GI bill, but Fussell, as an infantryman was much closer to the horror. He became a cynic and critic, repelled by the coercive teamwork so destructive to individuality.

Harlan’s experience was more benign. He enjoyed the status and sense of place provided by the military experience and was clearly less embittered by the experience.
… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
ecw0647 | Sep 30, 2013 |
2566. Booker T. Washington:The Making of a Black Leader 1856-1901, by Louis R. Harlan (read 9 Jan 1994) (Pulitzer Biography prize for 1984) (Bancroft Prize in 1973) This is the first volume of Harlan's biography of Booker T. Washington. It was published in 1973. Much of this book was familiar, because most of it was covered in Up From Slavery (which I read on 5 Jan 1994. B.T.W. was far too accommodating. The furor over T.R. having him to dinner at the White House in October 1901 is really sickening to read about, and it is also sickening that TR should have later decided that it was a mistake to have him to dinner.. Certainly today's political correctness is far far preferable to the awful attitude that was so casually accepted in BTW's time. This book is well done, and does not gloss over BTW's faults, but still there was much that was praiseworthy about him.… (plus d'informations)
½
 
Signalé
Schmerguls | Jul 28, 2013 |
2669 Booker T. Washington: The Wizard of Tuskegee 1901-1915, by Louis R. Harlan (read 18 Jan 1994) This book is not chronological, but I found it well worth reading. I had not heard of the beating Washington got in New York in 1911, and an entire chapter is devoted to that incident. It is a questionable affair and one wonders what he was doing at the building where the incident began. This book shows that after Wilson was elected in 1912 Booker became a little less sheep-like. Wilson was a white supremacist segregationist, and Washington had little to do with Booker then. I would like to go to Tuskegee, Ala., and see his school. I wonder what it is like today.… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
Schmerguls | Apr 13, 2008 |

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Œuvres
7
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178
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