While a few pieces are by familiar figures such as Frederick Douglass and Black Elk, most are by ""ordinary"" people-African, Latino, Native American, Irish, Chinese, Jewish, Japanese, Polish, Mexican, Italian, Caribbean, Indian, Puerto Rican, Korean-who recount their struggles and aspirations eloquently and with dignity. One of the country's premier multiculturalist scholars, Takaki (A Different Mirror: A History of Multicultural America) eschews the angry, jargon-ridden ideological polemics that make up the usual artillery of the curriculum wars, opting instead to let America's diverse peoples speak for themselves in excerpts that are both informative and moving. Through this collection of essays, oral histories and primary source material, Takaki challenges what he describes as ""the master narrative of American history, the ethnocentric story told from the perspective of the English colonists and their descendants"" by illuminating the contributions that America's numerous ethnic groups have made to the nation's history.
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