African Ethnobotany in the AmericasRobert Voeks, John Rashford Springer Science & Business Media, 2012 M09 25 - 429 páginas African Ethnobotany in the Americas provides the first comprehensive examination of ethnobotanical knowledge and skills among the African Diaspora in the Americas. Leading scholars on the subject explore the complex relationship between plant use and meaning among the descendants of Africans in the New World. With the aid of archival and field research carried out in North America, South America, and the Caribbean, contributors explore the historical, environmental, and political-ecological factors that facilitated/hindered transatlantic ethnobotanical diffusion; the role of Africans as active agents of plant and plant knowledge transfer during the period of plantation slavery in the Americas; the significance of cultural resistance in refining and redefining plant-based traditions; the principal categories of plant use that resulted; the exchange of knowledge among Amerindian, European and other African peoples; and the changing significance of African-American ethnobotanical traditions in the 21st century.
Bolstered by abundant visual content and contributions from renowned experts in the field, African Ethnobotany in the Americas is an invaluable resource for students, scientists, and researchers in the field of ethnobotany and African Diaspora studies. |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 6-10 de 89
... grown in Africa supplied some of the food demand, the provisions slave ships loaded in Africa also included African cereals ... growing in the food plots of their slaves. Europeans referred to some species by geographical descriptors or ...
... grown in tropical America, such as guandu, guandul, wando (Portuguese, Spanish, and Dutch for the pigeon pea); dendê, abbay (Portuguese, Jamaican English for African palm oil); quiabo, quingombó (Portuguese, Spanish for okra); bissy and ...
... growing Mandinka, who still cultivate and make several food preparations with sorrel, Hibiscus sabdariffa, which evolved among the local rice plantations whose slave populations included people from Senegambia and Guinea-Bissau). Until ...
... growing • Oryza glaberrima • Oryza sativa • Atlantic slave trade • Columbian Exchange • Lowcountry rice growing • African/American parallels • Gullah • Division of labor. Introduction. Africanists and students of the African diaspora are ...
... growing was indigenous to Africa and of long standing there, that in the Americas non-slave labor could never be induced to grow rice for export, and that “putative parallels have emerged between rice cultivation in Africa and...the ...
Contenido
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12 | |
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35 | |
African Origins of Sesame Cultivation in the Americas | 67 |
Handicrafts and Crafters | 122 |
By the Rivers of Babylon The Lowcountry Basket in Slavery and Freedom | 123 |
Gathering Buying and Growing Sweetgrass Muhlenbergia sericea Urbanization and Social Networking in the Sweetgrass BasketMaking Industry of ... | 153 |
Medicinal and Spiritual Ethno fl oras | 216 |
TransAtlantic Diaspora Ethnobotany Legacies of West African and Iberian Mediterranean Migration in Central Cuba | 217 |
What Makes a Plant Magical? Symbolism and Sacred Herbs in AfroSurinamese Winti Rituals | 247 |
Medicinal and Cooling Teas of Barbados | 285 |
Ethnobotanical Continuity and Change | 310 |
Candomblés Cosmic Tree and Brazils Ficus Species | 311 |
Exploring Biocultural Contexts Comparative Woody Plant Knowledge of an Indigenous and AfroAmerican Maroon Community in Suriname South ... | 335 |
Ethnobotany of Brazils African Diaspora The Role of Floristic Homogenization | 394 |
Marketing Culture and Conservation Value of NTFPs Case Study of AfroEcuadorian Use of Piquigua Heteropsis ecuadorensis Araceae | 175 |
Berimbau de barriga Musical Ethnobotany of the AfroBrazilian Diaspora | 195 |