Get Free Shipping on orders over $79
Sowing the Forest : A Historical Ecology of People and Their Landscapes - William Balee

Sowing the Forest

A Historical Ecology of People and Their Landscapes

By: William Balee

Hardcover | 23 May 2023

At a Glance

Hardcover


$131.75

or 4 interest-free payments of $32.94 with

 or 

Ships in 5 to 10 business days

Explores how, over centuries, Amazonian people and their cultures have interacted with rainforests

William BalEe is a world-renowned expert on the cultural and historical ecology of the Amazon basin. His new collection, Sowing the Forest, is a companion volume to the award-winning Cultural Forests of the Amazon, published in 2013. Sowing the Forest engages in depth with how, over centuries, Amazonian people and their cultures have interacted with rainforests, making the landscapes of palm forests and other kinds of forests, and how these and related forests have fed back into the vocabulary and behavior of current indigenous occupants of the remotest parts of the vast hinterlands.

The book is divided into two parts. Part 1, "Substrate of Intentionality," comprises chapters on historical ecology, indigenous palm forests, plant names in Amazonia, the origins of the Amazonian plantain, and the unknown "Dark Earth people" of thousands of years ago and their landscaping. Together these chapters illustrate the phenomenon of feedback between culture and environment.

In part 2, "Scope of Transformation," BalEe lays out his theory of landscape transformation, which he divides into two rubrics-primary landscape transformation and secondary landscape transformation-and for which he provides examples and various specific effects. One chapter compares environmental and social interrelationships in an Orang Asli group in Malaysia and the Ka'apor people of eastern Amazonian Brazil, and another chapter covers loss of language and culture in the Bolivian Amazon. A final chapter addresses the controversial topic of monumentality in the rainforest. BalEe concludes by emphasizing the common thread in Amazonian historical ecology: the long-term phenomenon of encouraging diversity for its own sake, not just for economic reasons.
Industry Reviews
"Sowing the Forest is impressive in its interdisciplinarity, bringing together extensive original work involving ethnography, botany, and linguistics, as well as engaging with other disciplines. It makes interesting and important contributions on multiple levels. Few other monographs of this nature are as wide-ranging."-Patience Epps, coeditor of Upper Rio Negro: Cultural and Linguistic Interaction in Northwestern Amazonia

More in Social & Cultural Anthropology, Ethnography

Bullshit Jobs : A Theory - David Graeber

RRP $26.99

$21.75

19%
OFF
Bush Food : Aboriginal Food & Herbal Medicine - Jennifer Isaacs

RRP $54.99

$42.75

22%
OFF
The Dawn of Everything : A New History of Humanity - David Graeber
Trauma Trails : Recreating Song Lines : Recreating Song Lines - Judy Atkinson
Angela's Ashes - Frank McCourt

RRP $19.99

$18.75

Guns, Germs and Steel : Patterns of Life - Jared Diamond

RRP $26.99

$21.75

19%
OFF
Wonderstruck : How Wonder and Awe Shape the Way We Think - Helen De Cruz
Follow the Rabbit Proof Fence : Nungar Ser. - Doris Pilkington Garimara

RRP $19.95

$17.99

10%
OFF
Sapiens : A Brief History of Humankind - Yuval Noah Harari

RRP $27.99

$23.75

15%
OFF
First Knowledges Ceremony : All Our Yesterdays for Today - Georgia Curran
The Power of Women : An Atlas of Beauty Book - Mihaela Noroc

RRP $55.00

$40.75

26%
OFF