Die Weiße Rose by B. Traven
(10 User reviews)
1299
Traven, B., 1882-1969
German
Die Weiße Rose by B. Traven is a novel written in the early 20th century. Set in the Mexican oil zone, it contrasts an aggressively expansionist U.S. oil company with an Indigenous hacendado, Hacinto Yanyez, whose ancestral, communal understanding of land refuses commodification. As the company targets the hacienda La Rosa Blanca, the narrative foc...
The opening of the novel establishes the Condor Oil Company’s voracious land-grab tactics and then centers on La Rosa Blanca, an eight-hundred-hectare hacienda owned by Hacinto Yanyez. Agents arrive to lease or buy, brandishing promises and piles of gold, but Hacinto rejects them on principle, seeing the land as a trust for his descendants and his compadres rather than a saleable asset. Scenes of daily life on the hacienda—kinship ties, work rhythms, songs, and the compadre system—underscore what would be lost if the community were uprooted, while even the foreman Margarito refuses higher wages in the oil camps because they mean permanent exile. When negotiation fails, the agent departs in anger, hinting at coercion to come. A sharp cut to the company’s San Francisco headquarters introduces its smiling, slogan-plastered president, whose private indulgences and ruthless resolve reveal the impersonal force arrayed against the hacienda, setting the conflict in motion. (This is an automatically generated summary.)
Ethan Clark
4 months agoIf you enjoy this genre, the logical flow of arguments makes it an essential resource for research. Simply brilliant.
Noah Scott
1 month agoMake no mistake, the attention to historical detail adds a layer of realism that is rare. Truly inspiring.
Mary Johnson
4 months agoThis download was worth it since the diagrams and footnotes included in this version are very helpful. Truly inspiring.
Deborah Scott
6 months agoSimply put, the technical accuracy of the content is spot on. Highly recommended for everyone.
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Brian Jackson
6 months agoBelieve the hype, the interplay between the protagonists drives the story forward beautifully. Absolutely essential reading.