The Picture They Called Progress

The Picture They Called Progress

Softcover

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Description

This book confronts the long arc of Indigenous American dispossession as a rolling genocide, where the seizure of land was progressively dressed in the language of treaties, reform, and “civilization.” It traces how wars, removals, allotment laws, and resource extraction were framed as the advance of order and modernity, even as they shattered lifeways, killed entire communities, and relocated tribal nations into shrinking parcels of territory. The narrative centers on three overlapping mechanisms: the legal and diplomatic veil of treaties that were routinely broken or twisted by the United States to open new territories; the institutionalized violence of removal—such as the Trail of Tears—and later the Dawes Act, which parcelized reservations into private plots and then sold “surplus” land to white settlers; and the cultural apparatus of “civilizing missions,” boarding schools, and missionary campaigns that turned the theft of territory into a moral project of assimilation. Drawing on treaty records, government reports, and Native oral histories, the book shows how settler law and frontier violence combined to transform Indigenous homelands into extractive zones under the banner of progress.

Book Information

Main Genre
Specialized Books
Sub Genre
History & Archaeology
Format
Softcover
Pages
272
Price
51.99 €

Author Description

Jonathan Hayes is an English-language author who writes about psychology, leadership, and personal development. His work blends thoughtful reflection with practical insight, exploring how mindset, resilience, and human behavior influence everyday decisions and long-term growth. His writing style is calm, engaging, and accessible, with a strong focus on clarity, self-awareness, and meaningful change.