144 pages • 4 hours read
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Contrary to ideologically propagandistic renderings of the origins of America, Whitehead asserts that it is not lofty ideals of freedom for all nor the underdog’s escape from persecution, religious or otherwise, that are at the root of the American story. Instead, in a far cry from the romanticized notion of America as the land of the free, home of the brave, savior of the battered horde, Whitehead presents us with an America that is ceaselessly violent, corrupt, oppressive, and rotten at its core.
This theme is most prominently displayed through the character of Ridgeway, who proclaims this truth repeatedly and without qualification. Ridgeway can be seen as a kind of American emissary. Naked in his proclamations that the white man is entitled to steal Indigenous lands, massacre Indigenous peoples, and enslave Africans to force them to generate profits that only the white man will enjoy, Ridgeway does not sugarcoat the deep brutality, entitlement, and shameless greed that is the true impetus of the “American Spirit.”
This theme is also iterated in Lumbly’s memorable quote, which is repeated at various times throughout the narrative. Before Cora boards Plus, gain access to 8,500+ more expert-written Study Guides. Including features:
By Colson Whitehead