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The Sacred Hills and the Shrine of Democracy Mount Rushmore, the Black Hills, and the Struggle Over American Memory

Par : Julia Wolbrook
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  • FormatePub
  • ISBN8232615406
  • EAN9798232615406
  • Date de parution07/03/2026
  • Protection num.pas de protection
  • Infos supplémentairesepub
  • ÉditeurDraft2Digital

Résumé

Rising from the granite heart of the Black Hills, Mount Rushmore has long been celebrated as a monument to American ideals. The towering faces of George Washington, Thomas Jefferson, Theodore Roosevelt, and Abraham Lincoln gaze across the landscape as symbols of democracy, unity, and national ambition. Yet beneath this iconic image lies a deeper, more complicated story-one rooted in sacred land, broken treaties, and the enduring struggle over whose history America chooses to remember.
In The Sacred Hills and the Shrine of Democracy, readers are taken into the rugged beauty of the Black Hills-known to the Lakota as Paha Sapa, the spiritual center of their world. Through vivid storytelling and careful historical insight, the book uncovers the dramatic collision between Indigenous spirituality and American nation-building. From the gold rush that ignited conflict to the controversial creation of Mount Rushmore, it reveals how a landscape revered for centuries became a battleground of identity, power, and memory.
Blending history, culture, and political reflection, this compelling narrative explores:·        the sacred meaning of the Black Hills to the Lakota people·        the political vision behind the creation of Mount Rushmore·        the long legal and moral struggle over the ownership of the Black Hills·        the ongoing debate about monuments, memory, and national identityAt once a gripping historical investigation and a profound meditation on how nations remember themselves, The Sacred Hills and the Shrine of Democracy challenges readers to reconsider one of America's most recognizable landmarks.
Because Mount Rushmore is more than a monument-it is a mirror reflecting the triumphs, tensions, and unfinished stories of the American past. Perfect for readers of history, cultural studies, and political debate, this book offers a powerful journey into the landscapes where memory, identity, and democracy are still being carved in stone.