Mud, Blood, and Ghosts: Populism, Eugenics, and Spiritualism in the American West

(Author)
Available
Product Details
Price
$34.50
Publisher
University of Nebraska Press
Publish Date
Pages
356
Dimensions
6.0 X 9.0 X 0.79 inches | 1.15 pounds
Language
English
Type
Paperback
EAN/UPC
9781496235060

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About the Author
Julie Carr is a professor of English at the University of Colorado, Boulder. She is the author or coauthor of numerous books of poetry and prose, including 100 Notes on Violence, Someone Shot My Book, and Real Life: An Installation.
Reviews
"An exquisite mosaic of the cruel and haunting complexities of family, race, property, and political power in the American West. Carefully researched, Mud, Blood, and Ghosts is a brave and moving book."--Avery F. Gordon, author of Ghostly Matters: Haunting and the Sociological Imagination
"An outstanding, genre-bending family memoir. . . . Written with the prowess of a scholar and full of the insightfulness and precision of a poet, Mud, Blood, and Ghosts takes us simultaneously back to the nineteenth-century family origins of this story and into our turbulent present, where the urgent beating of land taken reverberates aloud, reminding us of the structural inequality of this country. Carr visits with ghosts and delivers their truth: the past is never the past. The future, if there is one, is up to us. Frankly: a must-read."--Cristina Rivera Garza, distinguished professor of Hispanic studies and creative writing at the University of Houston
"Julie Carr, in her panoramic exhumation and exposé of the ties--the roots--that bind, precariously and profoundly, the present to the past, is, as it turns out, the ghost jumping on her great-grandfather's bed, rustling his blankets, keeping his life--and history, for the future--unquiet, unable to rest. Mud, Blood, and Ghosts--transdisciplinary biography as reappropriation--is not only the title of this book, but precisely what it is made of."--Brandon Shimoda, author of The Grave on the Wall
"Why should readers care about Omer Kem? Because he stands in for a kind of everyman--his hopes, fears, and prejudices represent the legacies that white Americans carry into the present. Mud, Blood, and Ghosts powerfully captures what it means to be an American in the twenty-first century, sticky with the residue of history. It is beautiful, evocative, and difficult. This is the right book at the right time."--Katrine Barber, author of In Defense of Wyam: Native-White Alliances and the Struggle for Celilo Village
"Julie Carr brings alive the disquieting and kaleidoscope history of her great-grandfather, a radical Populist who homesteaded in the U.S. West at the turn of the century. She unflinchingly shows how his struggle for survival was characterized by an unruly combination of hardscrabble determination, spiritual longings, eugenic beliefs, and white supremacy. As she poignantly reconstructs an intensely personal past, Carr grapples with the ghosts of violence, silence, and memory in the politically volatile present."--Alexandra Minna Stern, author of Eugenic Nation: Faults and Frontiers of Better Breeding in Modern America