After the Massacre

After the Massacre
Author: Heonik Kwon
Publsiher: Univ of California Press
Total Pages: 248
Release: 2006-11-10
Genre: History
ISBN: 0520247973

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Though a generation has passed since the massacre of civilians at My Lai, the legacy of this tragedy continues to reverberate throughout Vietnam and the rest of the world. This text considers how Vietnamese villagers have assimilated the catastrophe of these mass deaths into their everyday ritual lives.

A Massacre in Memphis

A Massacre in Memphis
Author: Stephen V. Ash
Publsiher: Hill and Wang
Total Pages: 288
Release: 2013-10-15
Genre: History
ISBN: 9780809067985

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An unprecedented account of one of the bloodiest and most significant racial clashes in American history In May 1866, just a year after the Civil War ended, Memphis erupted in a three-day spasm of racial violence that saw whites rampage through the city's black neighborhoods. By the time the fires consuming black churches and schools were put out, forty-six freed slaves had been murdered. Congress, furious at this and other evidence of white resistance in the conquered South, launched what is now called Radical Reconstruction, policies to ensure the freedom of the region's four million blacks-and one of the most remarkable experiments in American history. Stephen V. Ash's A Massacre in Memphis is a portrait of a Southern city that opens an entirely new view onto the Civil War, slavery, and its aftermath. A momentous national event, the riot is also remarkable for being "one of the best-documented episodes of the American nineteenth century." Yet Ash is the first to mine the sources available to full effect. Bringing postwar Memphis, Tennessee to vivid life, he takes us among newly arrived Yankees, former Rebels, boisterous Irish immigrants, and striving freed people, and shows how Americans of the period worked, prayed, expressed their politics, and imagined the future. And how they died: Ash's harrowing and profoundly moving present-tense narration of the riot has the immediacy of the best journalism. Told with nuance, grace, and a quiet moral passion, A Massacre in Memphis is Civil War-era history like no other.

After the Massacre

After the Massacre
Author: Robert S. Weddle,Juan Ángel de Oyarzún
Publsiher: Texas Tech University Press
Total Pages: 252
Release: 2007
Genre: Biography & Autobiography
ISBN: 0896725960

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Chronicles the Spanish expedition to punish the Taovaya Indians and their allies after the Mission Santa Cruz de San Saba was burned to the ground.

Written After a Massacre in the Year 2018

Written After a Massacre in the Year 2018
Author: Daniel Borzutzky
Publsiher: Unknown
Total Pages: 104
Release: 2022-03-08
Genre: Poetry
ISBN: 156689624X

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National Book Award winner Daniel Borzutzky pens an incandescent indictment of capitalism's moral decay. In Written After a Massacre in the Year 2018, Daniel Borzutzky rages against the military industrial complex that profits from violence, against the unjust policing of certain bodies, against xenophobia passing for immigration policy, against hate spreading like a virus. He grieves for children in cages and those slain in the Tree of Life synagogue shooting in Pittsburgh. But pulsing amid Borzutzky's outrage over our era's tragedies is a longing for something better: for generosity to triumph over stinginess and for peace to transform injustice. Borzutzky's strident language juxtaposes the horror of consumer-culture violence with its absurdity, and he masterfully shifts between shock and heartbreak over the course of the collection. Bleak but not hopeless, Written After a Massacre in the Year 2018 is an unflinching poetic reckoning with the twenty-first century.

The Castleton Massacre

The Castleton Massacre
Author: Sharon Anne Cook,Margaret Carson
Publsiher: Dundurn
Total Pages: 206
Release: 2022-07-26
Genre: True Crime
ISBN: 9781459749887

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A former United Church minister massacres his family. What led to this act of femicide, and why were his victims forgotten? On May 2, 1963, Robert Killins, a former United Church minister, slaughtered every woman in his family but one. She (and her brother) lived to tell the story of what motivated a talented man who had been widely admired, a scholar and graduate from Queen’s University, to stalk and terrorize the women in his family for almost twenty years and then murder them. Through extensive oral histories, Cook and Carson painstakingly trace the causes of a femicide in which four women and two unborn babies were murdered over the course of one bloody evening. While they situate this murderous rampage in the literature on domestic abuse and mass murders, they also explore how the two traumatized child survivors found their way back to health and happiness. Told through vivid first-person accounts, this family memoir explores how a murderer was created.

Aftermath

Aftermath
Author: Monique Lépine,Harold Gagné
Publsiher: Unknown
Total Pages: 0
Release: 2008
Genre: Mass murderers
ISBN: 0670069698

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On Dec. 6, 1989 Monique Lépine, a nurse and mother of two is on her way to a prayer meeting when she hears on the radio that a crazed gunman has just killed 14 women at the École Polytechnique in Montréal. Deeply distressed, she asks her prayer group to pray for the women and their families and the family of the killer. Little does she know she is praying for herself: the killer is her son, Marc. Thus begins Monique Lépine's nightmare. Overcome by sadness, guilt, shame, isolation, and the terrible pain of losing a son, Lépine hid her grief for 17 years. She resisted the hordes of media from around the world wanting to question her about what is still the worst mass shooting on Canadian soil. What changed her mind about speaking publicly was another terrible event: the Dawson College shooting in September 2006, when another lone gunman killed a young woman and injured several others. She gave a TV interview in Québec to Harold Gagné, and received a flood of sympathetic mail telling her that her own story could help other families with their grief. This is a story of grief and survival, told by an ordinary woman faced with seemingly insurmountable challenges.

Mountain Meadows Massacre

Mountain Meadows Massacre
Author: Richard E. Turley,Janiece L. Johnson,LaJean Purcell Carruth
Publsiher: University of Oklahoma Press
Total Pages: 535
Release: 2017-06-22
Genre: History
ISBN: 9780806158969

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On September 11, 1857, a group of Mormons aided by Paiute Indians brutally murdered some 120 men, women, and children traveling through a remote region of southwestern Utah. Within weeks, news of the atrocity spread across the United States. But it took until 1874—seventeen years later—before a grand jury finally issued indictments against nine of the perpetrators. Mountain Meadows Massacre chronicles the prolonged legal battle to gain justice for the victims. The editors of this two-volume collection of documents have combed public and private manuscript collections from across the United States to reconstruct the complex legal proceedings that occurred in the massacre’s aftermath. This exhaustively researched compilation covers a nearly forty-year history of investigation and prosecution—from the first reports of the massacre to the dismissal of the last indictment in 1896. Of special importance in Volume 2 are the transcripts of legal proceedings against John D. Lee—many of which the editors have transcribed anew from the shorthand. The two trials against Lee led to his confession, conviction, and ultimately his execution on the massacre site in 1877, all documented in this volume. Historians have long debated the circumstances surrounding the Mountain Meadows Massacre, one of the most disturbing and controversial events in American history, and painful questions linger to this day. This invaluable, exhaustively researched collection allows readers the opportunity to form their own conclusions about the forces behind this dark moment in western U.S. history.

Bullets and Opium

Bullets and Opium
Author: Liao Yiwu
Publsiher: Atria/One Signal Publishers
Total Pages: 320
Release: 2020-03-03
Genre: Biography & Autobiography
ISBN: 9781982126650

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A “memorable series of portraits of the working class people who defended Tiananmen Square” (The New York Review of Books) during the protests from the award-winning poet, dissident, and “one of the most original and remarkable Chinese writers of our time” (Philip Gourevitch). Much has been written about the Tiananmen Square protests, but very little exists in the words of those who were actually there. For over seven years, Liao Yiwu—a master of contemporary Chinese literature, imprisoned and persecuted as a counter-revolutionary until he fled the country in 2011—secretly interviewed survivors of the devastating 1989 Tiananmen Square massacre. Tortured, imprisoned, and forced into silence and the margins of Chinese society for thirty years, their harrowing and unforgettable stories are now finally revealed in this “indispensable historical document” (Kirkus Reviews, starred review).