MikeDunnAuthor, to books

Today in Labor History February 23, 1882: B. Traven was born on this date in Poznan, Poland. Traven’s real name was probably Ret Marut. He was active in the Bavarian uprising and the Bavarian Soviet Republic of 1919. When the German state quashed the Republic and started arresting and executing activists, he fled to Mexico, where he began writing novels. Traven was a brilliant satirist and wrote novels sympathetic to workers and peasants, including the “Treasure of the Sierra Madre,” “The Death Ship,” “The White Rose,” as well as his Jungle Series of novel depicting the plight of Indigenous campesinos in Mexico.

#workingclass #LaborHistory #novel #author #writer #books #fiction #BTraven #uprising #soviet #rebellion #peasants #communism #prison #campesinos #mexico #poland #germany @bookstadon

MikeDunnAuthor, to books

Today in Labor History February 18, 1943: The Nazis arrested the members of the White Rose movement. The activist group called for opposition to the Nazi regime through an anonymous leaflet and graffiti campaign. The Nazis put on a show trial in which none of the defendants were allowed to speak. They executed Hans and Sophie Schol, and Christoph Probst on February 22, 1943. White Rose leaflets openly denounced the persecution and mass murder of the Jews. They might have taken their name from the poem "Cultivo una rosa blanca," by Cuban revolutionary and poet, Jose Marti. Alternatively, they may have gotten it from the B. Traven novel, “Die Weiße Rose” (The White Rose).” Traven served on the Central Council of the short-lived Bavarian Soviet Republic. He escaped the terror that followed the crushing of the Republic and fled to Mexico, where he wrote numerous novels, including “Death Ship” and “The Treasure of the Sierra Madre.”

@bookstadon

kolya, to random
@kolya@social.cologne avatar

I started reading by . It's about an oil company that wants to buy up farmland in Mexico. The indigenous farm owner however argues that the farm has fed his kin for many generations and that he owes it to future generations to keep it that way. That book is 94 years old and constantly drops arguments about sustainability, corporate expansionism, the environment vs fossile oil.
I'm thinking about ways to post the book here as a continuing story like @samuelpepys's diaries.

first pages of "Die Weiße Rose" by B. Traven, 1929

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