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| Author:
Adam Hochschild |
In the 1880s, as the European powers
were carving up Africa, King Leopold
II of Belgium seized for himself the
vast and mostly unexplored territory
surrounding the Congo River. Carrying
out a genocidal plundering of the Congo,
he looted its rubber, brutalized its
people, and ultimately slashed its population
by ten million--all the while shrewdly
cultivating his reputation as a great
humanitarian. Heroic efforts to expose
these crimes eventually led to the first
great human rights movement of the twentieth
century, in which everyone from Mark
Twain to the Archbishop of Canterbury
participated.
King Leopold's Ghost is the
haunting account of a megalomaniac of
monstrous proportions, a man as cunning,
charming, and cruel as any of the great
Shakespearean villains. It is also the
deeply moving portrait of those who
fought Leopold: a brave handful of missionaries,
travellers, and young idealists who
went to Africa for work or adventure
and unexpectedly found themselves witnesses
to a holocaust. Hochschild brings this
largely untold story alive with the
wit and skill of a Barbara Tuchman.
Like her, he knows that history often
provides a far richer cast of characters
than any novelist could invent. Chief
among them is Edmund Morel, a young
British shipping agent who went on to
lead the international crusade against
Leopold. Another hero of this tale,
the Irish patriot Roger Casement, ended
his life on a London gallows. Two courageous
black Americans, George Washington Williams
and William Sheppard, risked much to
bring evidence of the Congo atrocities
to the outside world. Sailing into the
middle of the story was a young Congo
River steamboat officer named Joseph
Conrad. And looming above them all,
the duplicitous billionaire King Leopold
II. With power and compassion, this
book brands the tragedy of the Congo--too
long forgotten--onto the conscience
of the West.
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From Publishers Weekly
Hochschild's superb, engrossing chronicle focuses on one of the great,
horrifying and nearly forgotten crimes of the century: greedy Belgian
King Leopold II's rape of the Congo, the vast colony he seized as his
private fiefdom in 1885. Until 1909, he used his mercenary army to force
slaves into mines and rubber plantations, burn villages, mete out sadistic
punishments, including dismemberment, and commit mass murder. The hero
of Hochschild's highly personal, even gossipy narrative is Liverpool shipping
agent Edmund Morel, who, having stumbled on evidence of Leopold's atrocities,
became an investigative journalist and launched an international Congo
reform movement with support from Mark Twain, Booker T. Washington and
Arthur Conan Doyle. Other pivotal figures include Joseph Conrad, whose
disgust with Leopold's "civilizing mission" led to Heart of
Darkness; and black American journalist George Washington Williams, who
wrote the first systematic indictment of Leopold's colonial regime in
1890. Hochschild (The Unquiet Ghost) documents the machinations of Leopold,
who won over President Chester A. Arthur and bribed a U.S. senator to
derail Congo protest resolutions. He also draws provocative parallels
between Leopold's predatory one-man rule and the strongarm tactics of
Mobuto Sese Seko, who ruled the successor state of Zaire. But most of
all it is a story of the bestiality of one challenged by the heroism of
many in an increasingly democratic world. 30 illustrations.
Copyright 1998 Reed Business Information, Inc. |
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$15.00 (softcover)
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