Present Out Of Books The Rebellion of the Hanged (Jungle Novels #5)
Title | : | The Rebellion of the Hanged (Jungle Novels #5) |
Author | : | B. Traven |
Book Format | : | Paperback |
Book Edition | : | First Edition |
Pages | : | Pages: 260 pages |
Published | : | August 1st 1994 by Ivan R. Dee (first published 1936) |
Categories | : | Fiction. Historical. Historical Fiction |
B. Traven
Paperback | Pages: 260 pages Rating: 4.11 | 514 Users | 39 Reviews
Narration Toward Books The Rebellion of the Hanged (Jungle Novels #5)
The Rebellion of the Hanged is the fifth of B. Traven's six legendary Jungle Novels which together form an epic of the birth of the Mexican Revolution. Set in the slave-labor mahogany plantations of tropical Mexico in 1910, at the time of the uprising against the rule of Porfirio D�az and the beginnings of revolution, Rebellion is a powerful and somber tale of the tortures suffered by downtrodden Indians. But here it culminates in a revolt by the long-oppressed workers against the owners and overseers of the camps, and in a treacherous march through the jungles at the height of the rainy season--a human feat of epic proportions. In addition to his great storytelling ability, Traven's work has a special resonance today because of recent uprisings in the Chiapas highlands of southern Mexico, the very locale for many of Traven's writings. "Readers who ignore the genius of B. Traven do so at their peril."--New York Times Book Review. "Traven is a riveting storyteller."--Philadelphia Inquirer.Define Books In Pursuance Of The Rebellion of the Hanged (Jungle Novels #5)
Original Title: | La Rebelión de los Colgados |
ISBN: | 1566630649 (ISBN13: 9781566630641) |
Edition Language: | English |
Series: | Jungle Novels #5, Caoba-Zyklus #5 |
Rating Out Of Books The Rebellion of the Hanged (Jungle Novels #5)
Ratings: 4.11 From 514 Users | 39 ReviewsCriticize Out Of Books The Rebellion of the Hanged (Jungle Novels #5)
A friend of mine had gone on and one about this book for years, and so I was excited to read. Overall I really liked it, but wanted to like it more.Race is discussed oddly in the book, and women aren't even appendages to men, they're more like their children. It was hard to get past that a lot of time, and made their early abuse harder to think back upon since women continue to be demeaned and don't seem to get their moment of revenge/ resistance.Also, towards the end when they talk aboutAmazing book! I couldn't put it down once I'd started. A fictional and brutal story of class-conflict expressed through clashes of race in colonial Mexico between the Spanish (ruling/governing), Mestizo (artisans) and the indigenous populations (proletariats/slaves). Taking place during the end of Spanish control of the Americas this story acts as a prologue to the Mexican Revolution. Would recommend and read again!
Ok
A somewhat derivative, feeling inauthentic Latin America revolt against the cruel company and their managers. The usual degradation of the peons and Indians swindled into servitude, ground down by work and punishment is depicted well but somehow the story lacked sentiment and indeed given the basic adventure/action style little finale.The true history of the events I don't know but several times I kept thinking that's no plausible e.g. guys on horseback in the jungle, heading off people
Para los que niegan la crueldad de la época porfirian
The four previous books in this series were bleak and hopeless, writhing around in the misery of the laborers and the disgusting opportunism of those who steal their surplus value. The initial hundred or so pages of this book are even worse. The excesses of indignity, the violence, the stupidity and the preposterously unjust Porfiriato ruling class culminate and are no longer able to wring any further coin from the bodies of the indigenous people who slave under them in the mahogany plantations.
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