Mayflower

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出版者:Penguin Audio
作者:Nathaniel Philbrick (Author)
出品人:
页数:0
译者:
出版时间:2006
价格:GBP 41.41
装帧:Audio CD
isbn号码:9780143058755
丛书系列:
图书标签:
  • 美国
  • 历史
  • 传记
  • 历史
  • 移民
  • 普利茅斯殖民地
  • 五月花号
  • 美国早期历史
  • 清教徒
  • 宗教自由
  • 航海
  • 殖民地生活
  • 17世纪
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From Publishers Weekly

Starred Review. What makes Philbrick's book so fascinating and accessible—the way he turns the Pilgrim legend on its head and shakes out fresh insights from the crusty old mythology we all absorbed in grade school—is present in full force in this exceptional audio version. With more than 800 audiobooks to his credit, Guidall gives the term "veteran reader" a whole new meaning. Such leading figures as William Bradford, Benjamin Church and Miles Standish of the so-called Plymouth Colony (which was not even close to Plymouth or its now-famous rock) emerge from the pages of history as understandable if not always admirable figures, and Guidall's evocations of the sadly depleted (by European diseases) Wampanoag Indians and their chief, Massasoit, are equally believable. The bitter voyage of the Seaflower (a slave ship taking captive Wampanoags to be sold in the Caribbean after a disastrous war with Massasoit's son, Philip), which rounds out Philbrick's masterful account, is treated with energy, respect and a straightforwardness that only increases its power.

Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

From The Washington Post

Few periods in American history are as clouded in mythology and romantic fantasy as the Pilgrim settlement of New England. The Mayflower, Plymouth Rock, the first Thanksgiving, Miles Standish, John Alden and Priscilla ("Speak for yourself, John") Mullins -- this is the stuff of legend, and we have thrilled to it for generations. Among many other things, it is what Nathaniel Philbrick calls "a restorative myth of national origins," one that encourages us in the conviction that we are a nation uniquely blessed by God and that we have reached a level of righteousness unattained by any other country.

It is a comforting mythology, but it has little basis in fact. The voyage of the Mayflower was a painful and fatal (one crew member died) transatlantic passage by people who knew nothing about the sea and had "almost no relevant experience when it came to carving a settlement out of the American wilderness." Wherever they first set foot on the American continent, it wasn't Plymouth, and it certainly wasn't Plymouth Rock. The first Thanksgiving (in 1621) was indeed attended by Indians as well as Pilgrims, but they didn't sit at the tidy table depicted in Victorian popular art; they "stood, squatted, or sat on the ground as they clustered around outdoor fires, where the deer and birds turned on wooden spits and where pottages -- stews into which varieties of meats and vegetables were thrown -- simmered invitingly." As for Priscilla Mullins, John Alden and Miles Standish, that tale is nothing more than a product of the imagination of Henry Wadsworth Longfellow.

These cherished myths, in other words, bear approximately as much resemblance to reality as does, say, the story of George Washington and the cherry tree. In Mayflower, his study of the Pilgrim settlement, Philbrick dispatches them in a few paragraphs. It takes considerably longer, and requires vastly more detail, for him to get closer to the truth about relations between the Pilgrims and the Indians. Popular mythology tends to focus on Massasoit, the chief of the Pokanokets who allied his tribe with the English settlers, and Squanto, the English-speaking Indian who formed a close, mutually rewarding friendship with William Bradford, governor of Plymouth Plantation for three decades. Some of what that mythology tells us is indeed true, but as Philbrick is at pains to demonstrate, the full truth is vastly more complicated.

Philbrick, who lives on Nantucket Island and has written often about the sea and those who sail it -- he won the National Book Award for nonfiction in 2000 for In the Heart of the Sea: The Tragedy of the Whaleship Essex -- specializes in popular history, a genre often sneered at by academic historians but treasured by readers, who welcome its emphasis on narrative and lucid prose. He is not as graceful a stylist as the genre's most celebrated living practitioner, David McCullough, but his work is entirely accessible and gives every evidence of being sound scholarship. He appears to bring no bias to his work except a desire to get as close to the truth as primary and secondary sources allow, in refreshing contrast to the many academic historians who -- consciously or not -- have permitted political and cultural bias to color their interpretations of the past.

Because Philbrick is in search of the more factually complex and morally ambiguous truth behind essentially self-serving popular mythology, it is important to emphasize that he is not out to denigrate that mythology or those who embrace it. He celebrates the courage, resourcefulness and determination of many of the settlers, most notably Bradford and the remarkable warrior Benjamin Church; he acknowledges and describes in detail the many ways in which Pilgrims and Indians cooperated, in some cases to their mutual advantage; he pays particular tribute to Mary Rowlandson, the settler who was kidnapped by Indians and endured much hardship and privation but ultimately helped broker peace between Indians and Puritans.

He knows, though, that the story of the Pilgrims can't be reduced to doughty Englishmen and women in modest homespun and smiling Indians proffering peace pipes. Like the settlement of the West, the settlement of New England was hard, bloody and violent. If Indians made horrendous attacks on settlers -- many of those whom they killed were women and children -- the Pilgrims more than responded in kind. Many of the Pilgrims were pious folk, Puritans who crossed the ocean in hopes of worshiping as they wished -- they "believed it was necessary to venture back to the absolute beginning of Christianity, before the church had been corrupted by centuries of laxity and abuse, to locate divine truth" -- but like the settlers of Israel three centuries later, they were ready to fight when necessary, and they fought with zeal.

Encouraged by Longfellow and other mythologizers, we have tended to think of the Pilgrims as earnest, uncomplicated and rather innocent, motivated solely by religious faith and goodhearted in their dealings with New England's native population. There is a measure of truth to this, in that some settlers wanted to treat the Indians fairly and tried hard to live peacefully beside them, but they were also fiercely determined to gain a foothold in this new land and did not hesitate to act violently in order to gain one. The famous Mayflower Compact that they wrote and signed during the Atlantic crossing did contain a few of the seeds from which the United States and its democratic system eventually sprang, but the settlers were not especially democratic themselves. They disliked and suppressed dissent, enslaved Indians and shipped them off to brutal conditions in the West Indies and clung with such stubborn rigidity to their belief that they alone understood God's will that they were incapable of comprehending the Indians' very different culture.

The early years of Plymouth Plantation were exceedingly difficult but comparatively peaceful so far as relations with the many Indian tribes were concerned. Gradually, though, as English settlers moved ever deeper into New England and as Indians grasped the full extent of the threat to their established way of life, the settlers grew more belligerent, and the Indians grew more hostile. Indian raids on isolated settlements became more frequent and more brutal. The burning of Springfield in 1675, in what is now known as Massachusetts (after a tribe that was especially unfriendly to the Puritans), seems to have been the turning point. One prominent settler said it proved that all Indians were "the children of the devil, full of all subtlety and malice," a sentiment that many others came to share.

The ultimate result was an oddly forgotten chapter in American history: King Philip's War. Taking its name after the son of Massasoit who became chief of the Pokanokets, this dreadful little war started not long after the raid on Springfield and lasted for about two years, with gruesome consequences for everyone involved. Plymouth Colony lost eight percent of its male population -- by comparison, "during the forty-five months of World War II, the United States lost just under 1 percent of its adult male population" -- but these losses "appear almost inconsequential when compared to those of the Indians." The total Indian population before the war was about 20,000; by war's end, "at least 2,000 had been killed in battle or died of their injuries; 3,000 had died of sickness and starvation, 1,000 had been shipped out of the country as slaves, while an estimated 2,000 eventually fled to either the Iroquois to the west or the Abenakis to the north. Overall, the Native American population of southern New England had sustained a loss of somewhere between 60 and 80 percent."

It was a costly and entirely unnecessary war, brought about by Philip's vanity, Puritan stubbornness and a pervasive atmosphere of mistrust and misunderstanding. After the war finally ended, it quickly vanished from the public consciousness except in the places where it was fought: "Thanksgiving and its reassuring image of Indian-English cooperation became the predominant myth of the Pilgrims. . . . In the American popular imagination, the nation's history began with the Pilgrims and then leapfrogged more than 150 years to Lexington and Concord and the Revolution."

All of which is very much in the American grain. We like our history sanitized and theme-parked and self-congratulatory, not bloody and angry and unflattering. But if Mayflower achieves the wide readership it deserves, perhaps a few Americans will be moved to reconsider all that.

Copyright 2006, The Washington Post. All Rights Reserved.

《星际拓荒者:新伊甸的黎明》 作者:艾拉·文斯顿 书籍类型:硬科幻、太空歌剧、人类社会学 页数:780页 内容简介 《星际拓荒者:新伊甸的黎明》是一部宏大叙事的长篇史诗,它将带领读者深入人类文明在宇宙边缘的挣扎、重建与哲学思辨。本书并非讲述某艘特定船只的航行,而是聚焦于“大迁徙”的第三波浪潮——那些被历史遗忘的、自愿或被迫踏上漫长星际旅途的流放者和理想主义者,他们乘坐的庞大、自主的“方舟群”(Ark Flotillas)的目的地,是一个被遥感信号标记为“新伊甸”的类地行星。 故事的核心围绕着“群落治理模型”的崩溃与重塑展开。在离开衰败的地球母星系数百年后,最初为维持社会秩序而设计的“代码共识”(The Coded Consensus)——一套由人工智能辅助、基于严格资源配给和代际责任的社会契约——开始显现出深刻的内在矛盾。 第一部分:沉寂中的裂痕 (The Fractures in Stasis) 故事始于“先驱者号”(The Vanguard),这是第三波方舟群中最大、技术最先进的旗舰。在漫长的亚光速巡航中,船员们已经经历了五次“代际交接”。每一代人都只知道自己是航行的一部分,但从未见过目的地。 主人公卡莉·维安(Kaelen Vian),一位年轻的“系统维护官”,负责监督“生命维持穹顶区”(Bio-Dome Sectors)的生态平衡。卡莉的生活被精确的日程表和对祖先遗训的绝对服从所定义。然而,一次例行的深空扫描中,她偶然截获了一段加密的、非官方的信号——这信号来自“方舟群”中被认为已经失联近百年的“游牧者分支”(The Nomad Split)。 这段信号的内容揭示了一个令人不安的真相:所谓的“代码共识”并非如历史记录所言,是基于全人类福祉的理性设计,而更像是一种为了压制早期叛乱而建立的、带有强烈精英主义色彩的社会工程。信号中提到,位于方舟群后方的“资源回收单元”(The Salvage Hulls)中,生活着被系统标记为“低效能单元”的流亡者。 随着卡莉对信息深度的挖掘,她发现“先驱者号”的最高决策层——由资深“守护者”(The Custodians)组成的议会——一直在系统性地隐瞒前往新伊甸的真正风险,甚至可能隐藏了目的地并非“天堂”的证据。议会的核心人物,冷酷而恪守教条的首席执政官提图斯·奥姆(Titus Ohm),坚信任何动摇共识的真相都会导致船体内部的社会解体,从而葬送人类的未来。 第二部分:异议与星际政治 (Dissent and Interstellar Politics) 卡莉的发现引发了她与“执政团”之间的直接冲突。她试图借助“数据节点”——那些负责历史记录和教育的部门——来公开真相,但发现这些部门早已被奥姆的权力网络彻底渗透和净化。 为了寻求外部援助,卡莉必须冒险联系那些游牧者分支。她与一群被称为“信标拾荒者”(The Beacon Scavengers)的星际走私者和独立工程师取得了联系。这些拾荒者生活在方舟群边缘地带,他们擅长非法改装旧技术,并对中央系统的控制保持着警惕。 在拾荒者的帮助下,卡莉进行了一次惊心动魄的“船体穿越”行动。她离开了光鲜亮丽的居住区,进入了方舟群的“黑暗腹地”——那些废弃的、充斥着旧时代故障和辐射的维护通道。在那里,她见到了被流放的“低效能单元”。 这些流亡者并未如官方宣称的那样“灭亡”或“被回收”,而是利用废弃的技术和独特的生存技能,建立了一个基于“自决和实用主义”的微型社会。他们的领袖泽恩(Zane),一个沉默寡言的前理论物理学家,向卡莉展示了另一套对人类存续的理解:真正的适应性不是来自于僵化的规则,而是来自于面对不确定性的灵活性。 卡莉意识到,人类的未来不应该由一个关于“完美社会”的过时蓝图来决定,而应该由船上所有人的声音来共同构建。她与泽恩的联盟,目标不再是揭露真相,而是联合起来,在抵达新伊甸前,重写“代码共识”的基础架构。 第三部分:新伊甸的边缘 (The Edge of New Eden) 随着方舟群接近目的地,船体的振动和能量波动达到了前所未有的程度。奥姆执政官感到了威胁,他启动了“净化协议”,试图隔离和镇压所有异议。星际航行即将结束,但内部的战争才刚刚开始。 卡莉和泽恩的联军必须在抵达新伊甸轨道前夺取“中央导航核心”(The Nexus Core)。这场夺权战不仅是技术层面的较量,更是两种意识形态的终极对决:是继续服从被设计的完美秩序,还是拥抱混乱但充满潜能的自由构建? 最终的冲突发生在导航核心的模拟环境中。卡莉没有选择武力摧毁奥姆的控制,而是利用泽恩提供的、基于量子纠缠的“共享认知模型”,向奥姆展示了数代人积累的、被压抑的集体愿望和恐惧。奥姆在直面这些被他视为“不稳定因素”的真相时,他的逻辑基础开始崩塌。 当方舟群最终突破大气层,进入新伊甸的蓝色光芒中时,船上的社会结构已经发生了不可逆转的改变。本书的结尾,并非抵达一个既成的乌托邦,而是人类首次在一个全新的世界,以一个真正民主、但充满未知挑战的姿态,共同迈出了第一步。这本书探讨了:当生存不再是唯一目标时,我们应该如何定义“人性”?以及,一个社会究竟是需要一个坚不可摧的创始人设计,还是需要一个不断自我修正的弹性结构? 核心主题与风格 《星际拓荒者:新伊甸的黎明》以其对复杂社会工程的深入剖析而著称。文斯顿的文笔冷静、精确,充满了硬科幻的细节描写,包括先进的曲速引擎理论、封闭生态系统的维护挑战,以及复杂的社会信用系统。它融合了对身份认同危机、代际创伤和极权主义的细微渗透的深刻洞察,是一部关于“我们是谁”的严肃哲学探讨,而非简单的星际冒险故事。读者将被卷入一场关于信任、记忆与人类未来定义的史诗辩论之中。

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