Calls attention to the misuse of democracy to justify and commit genocide
List of Tables
Preface
Acknowledgments
Introduction: Defining Genocide
Part 1. Imagining Genocide
Introduction
1. The Core Values of Genocide
2. Emigrant Guides
3. The Overland Trail Experience
Part 2. Perpetrating Genocide
Introduction
4. The Economics of Genocide in Southern California
5. Democratic Death Squads of Northern California
Part 3. Supporting Genocide
Introduction
6. The Murder State
7. Federal Bystanders to and Agents of Genocide
8. Advertising Genocide
Conclusion: At a Crossroads in the Genocide
Epilogue: Forgetting and Remembering Genocide
Notes
Bibliography
Index
Brendan C. Lindsay is an assistant professor of history at California State University, Sacramento.
"Democracy and genocide are two activities that most would declare antagonistic. Yet Brendan Lindsay presents primary evidence that reveals the hatred and murderous acts committed by early Californians and government officials, as a grassroots movement, to settle the Golden States by exterminating and dispossessing Native peoples of their ancestral homelands". Jack Norton, Hupa historian and emeritus professor of Native American studies, Humboldt State University. "Historian Brendan Lindsay has documented the attempted extermination of California's first people and provided a detailed, comprehensive historical treatment of California's genocide. He offers a groundbreaking study that will change the historiography of California and genocide studies, a penetrating but readable book that will quickly become a classic". Larry Myers (Pomo), Executive Secretary of the California Native American Heritage Commission.
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