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'Wisdom Does Not Live in One House': Compiling Environmental Knowledge in Lesotho, Southern Africa, C.1880-1965

机译:“智慧不会合而为一”:汇编关于南部非洲莱索托的环境知识,C.1880-1965

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摘要

This dissertation reconstructs a history of the greater Qacha's Nek district of Lesotho, southern Africa from 1880 when farmers first settled the area, until 1965 on the eve of independence from Great Britain. This place-based study speaks to broader questions. How have people incorporated new and often foreign ideas into existing beliefs and practices? How did a person's social position affect how they interacted with new ideas? How have people applied knowledge to make and remake environments such as in gardens and fields? This study is based on field research in Lesotho, South Africa, and the United Kingdom. The author examined archival materials including colonial records, agricultural reports and surveys, national council proceedings, and vernacular newspapers. During four months of rural fieldwork in Lesotho the author collected oral histories, took photographs, and participated in village life.;The approach focuses on colonial government interventions into agriculture and pastoralism. These interventions serve as sites for examining historical changes in how Basotho people engaged with the non-human world. In so doing, the study makes three main interventions. First, the claims are situated within scholarly conversations about local knowledge, science, and environment under colonialism. Second, the stories of chiefs, farmers, and government employees told here extend the literature on Lesotho's political and economic history by highlighting the nuance of local politics, ecology, and agency. Finally, to contribute to the environmental historiography on Africa and rural places in general, the study probes the interplay of culture and nature. To do this, it narrates how people deployed eclectic knowledge to build, rebuild, and redefine environments.;The dissertation argues that the compilation of environmental knowledge must be understood as a historical process that encapsulates the meanings that people have imbued the landscape with, for example, by building homesteads, along with how people have understood the landscape as a system of resources to be used economically for subsistence and market purposes. These aspects of knowing are part of a single process that has unfolded, and continues to unfold, along a temporal trajectory that has varied across different social groups, such as men and women and chiefs and commoners.
机译:这篇论文重建了从1880年农民首次定居该地区到南部非洲莱索托的大Qacha Nek区的历史,直到1965年脱离英国独立前夕。这项基于地点的研究涉及更广泛的问题。人们如何将新的,经常是外国的思想融入现有的信仰和实践中?一个人的社会地位如何影响他们与新观念的互动?人们如何应用知识来制作和重现诸如花园和田野等环境?这项研究基于莱索托,南非和英国的实地研究。作者检查了档案材料,包括殖民记录,农业报告和调查,国民议会议事记录和白话报纸。在莱索托的四个月的农村田野调查中,作者收集了口述历史,拍摄了照片并参与了乡村生活。该方法的重点是殖民政府对农业和牧民的干预。这些干预措施可作为考察巴索托人如何与非人类世界互动的历史变化的场所。为此,该研究进行了三项主要干预。首先,这些主张位于殖民主义下有关当地知识,科学和环境的学术对话之内。其次,这里的酋长,农民和政府雇员的故事通过强调地方政治,生态和代理机构的细微差别,扩展了莱索托政治和经济历史的文献。最后,为对整个非洲和农村地区的环境史做出贡献,本研究探讨了文化与自然的相互作用。为此,它叙述了人们如何利用折衷知识来构建,重建和重新定义环境。论文认为,必须将环境知识的汇编理解为一个历史过程,其中包含了人们对景观的理解,包括例如,通过建造家园,以及人们如何将景观理解为一种经济地用于维持生计和市场目的的资源系统。知识的这些方面是一个单一过程的一部分,该过程沿着并且随着不同社会群体(例如男人和女人以及酋长和平民)的变化而变化的时间轨迹不断展开。

著录项

  • 作者

    Conz, Christopher R.;

  • 作者单位

    Boston University.;

  • 授予单位 Boston University.;
  • 学科 African history.;Sub Saharan Africa studies.;Environmental studies.
  • 学位 Ph.D.
  • 年度 2017
  • 页码 479 p.
  • 总页数 479
  • 原文格式 PDF
  • 正文语种 eng
  • 中图分类
  • 关键词

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