Skip to main content Skip to search Skip to search

History 20th Century

The Story of Your Ancestors

by (author) James Gangsan

Publisher
Libros Libertad
Initial publish date
Nov 2008
Category
20th Century
  • Paperback / softback

    ISBN
    9780980897999
    Publish Date
    Nov 2008
    List Price
    $19.95

Classroom Resources

Where to buy it

Description

The Story of Your Ancestors is arguably the first book ever written primarily for an audience living in the future. The author sincerely desired his work to be read by the not yet born so that they could try and understand how their totalitarian world was constructed by their twentieth and early twenty-first century progenitors. James Gangsan takes his readers on a frantic journey through time so that the men and women of the future could learn from past mistakes and in turn set about creating the sorts of societies his contemporaries continually clamed they wanted to build. Nero played the lyre and danced while watching Rome burn. While seeing his own world enter the first stages of the Dark Ages, Gangsan took a pen to paper and wrote a book for his descendants.

About the author

James Gangsan, was born and raised in Montreal but after finishing his university studies he moved to Seoul, South Korea where he has lived and worked ever since.While he was a graduate student, Gangsan became concerned about the dark aspects of globalization and in an attempt to understand the historical forces which gave birth to and nurtured the globalization movement he embarked on the writing of The Story of Your Ancestors. He is currently working on a comparative history of the country of his birth, Canada, and his adopted country, South Korea.

James Gangsan's profile page

Editorial Reviews

The Story of Your Ancestors takes a sardonic and personal scalpel to the past 30,000 years of human history, quickly revealing the catalyst for pretty much all human action and then shows how this thread of fear winds through the most significant events of the 20th and early 21st centuries.

Derek Jensen