Colonialism and Landscape

Colonialism and Landscape
Author: Andrew Sluyter
Publsiher: Rowman & Littlefield
Total Pages: 292
Release: 2002
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN: 0742515605

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Spurred by the dramatic landscape transformation associated with European colonization of the Americas, this work creates a prototype theory to explain relationships between colonialism and landscape.

Landscapes and Social Transformations on the Northwest Coast

Landscapes and Social Transformations on the Northwest Coast
Author: Jeff Oliver
Publsiher: University of Arizona Press
Total Pages: 272
Release: 2010
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 0816527873

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Nordamerika - Kolonialzeit - Landschaft - Raumkonzepte - soziale Konstruktion.

Visions of Nature

Visions of Nature
Author: Jarrod Hore
Publsiher: Univ of California Press
Total Pages: 352
Release: 2022-05-31
Genre: History
ISBN: 9780520381254

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Introduction : dispossession in focus : between ancestral ties and settler territoriality -- Six geobiographies : senses of site in the white settler world -- Space and the settler geographical imagination : the survey, the camera, and the problematic of waste -- A clock for seeing : revelation and rupture in settler colonial landscapes -- Tanga Whaka-ahua or, the man who makes the likenesses : managing indigenous presence in colonial landscapes -- Colonial encounter, epochal time, and settler romanticism in the nineteenth century -- Noble cities from primeval rorest : settler territoriality on the world stage -- Settler nativity : nations and natures into the twentieth century -- Conclusion : settler colonialism, reconciliation, and the problems of place.

The Colonial Landscape of the British Caribbean

The Colonial Landscape of the British Caribbean
Author: Roger Leech,Pamela Leech
Publsiher: Boydell & Brewer
Total Pages: 307
Release: 2021
Genre: History
ISBN: 9781783275656

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New research on the archaeology of the colonial landscapes of the Caribbean.

Colonial Inventions

Colonial Inventions
Author: Amar Wahab
Publsiher: Cambridge Scholars Publishing
Total Pages: 299
Release: 2010-02-19
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 9781443819992

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This book situates its contemplation of the nineteenth-century Trinidadian landscape in the context of an emerging sub-field of Caribbean postcolonial studies, by connecting the visual representation and indexing of colonial landscapes and peoples with the making of colonial power. Emphasis is placed on three pivotal image catalogues which span the pre and post emancipation periods and which connect the projects of British slavery and indentureship. The book unearths sketches, paintings, lithographs and engravings and analyzes them as central to the iconic framing and disciplining of colonized subjects, tropical nature and the plantation landscape. Focusing on the image works of British travellers Richard Bridgens and Charles Kingsley and Creole artist, Michel Jean Cazabon, the chapters consider how an aesthetic logic was not only illustrative but constitutive of racialized and gendered scripts of colonial landscapes, nature and identity. While these various strands of aesthetic reasoning reveal a seemingly coherent operation of colonial power, they also register the very ambiguity of these disciplinary projects in moments of uncertainty regarding the amelioration of African slavery, the emancipation of slavery, and the highly contested project of Indian indentureship in the Caribbean. The book reflects the dynamic instability of colonial inventive projects manifest in a period of experimental and troubled British rule that potentially frustrates any attempt to recover the truth of Caribbean colonial reality.

Colonial Cataclysms

Colonial Cataclysms
Author: Bradley Skopyk
Publsiher: University of Arizona Press
Total Pages: 337
Release: 2020-04-14
Genre: History
ISBN: 9780816539963

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The contiguous river basins that flowed in Tlaxcala and San Juan Teotihuacan formed part of the agricultural heart of central Mexico. As the colonial project rose to a crescendo in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, the Indigenous farmers of central Mexico faced long-term problems standard historical treatments had attributed to drought and soil degradation set off by Old World agriculture. Instead, Bradley Skopyk argues that a global climate event called the Little Ice Age brought cold temperatures and elevated rainfall to the watersheds of Tlaxcala and Teotihuacan. With the climatic shift came cataclysmic changes: great floods, human adaptations to these deluges, and then silted wetlands and massive soil erosion. This book chases water and soil across the colonial Mexican landscape, through the fields and towns of New Spain’s Native subjects, and in and out of some of the strongest climate anomalies of the last thousand or more years. The pursuit identifies and explains the making of two unique ecological crises, the product of the interplay between climatic and anthropogenic processes. It charts how Native farmers responded to the challenges posed by these ecological rifts with creative use of plants and animals from the Old and New Worlds, environmental engineering, and conflict within and beyond the courts. With a new reading of the colonial climate and by paying close attention to land, water, and agrarian ecologies forged by farmers, Skopyk argues that colonial cataclysms—forged during a critical conjuncture of truly unprecedented proportions, a crucible of human and natural forces—unhinged the customary ways in which humans organized, thought about, and used the Mexican environment. This book inserts climate, earth, water, and ecology as significant forces shaping colonial affairs and challenges us to rethink both the environmental consequences of Spanish imperialism and the role of Indigenous peoples in shaping them.

Sowing Empire

Sowing Empire
Author: Jill H. Casid
Publsiher: U of Minnesota Press
Total Pages: 326
Release: 2005-01-01
Genre: History
ISBN: 0816640963

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In an ambitious work of wide-ranging literary, visual, and historical allusion, Jill H.Casid examines how landscaping functioned in an imperial mode that defined and remade the "heartlands" of nations as well as the contact zones and colonial peripheries in the West and East Indies. Revealing the colonial landscape as far more than an agricultural system - as a means of regulating national, sexual, and gender identities - Casid also traces how the circulation of plants and hybridity influenced agriculture and landscaping on European soil and how colonial contacts materially shaped what we take as "European."

The Colonization of Unfamiliar Landscapes

The Colonization of Unfamiliar Landscapes
Author: Marcy Rockman,James Steele
Publsiher: Routledge
Total Pages: 273
Release: 2003-12-08
Genre: Education
ISBN: 9781134520145

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A series of case studies examines the archaeological evidence for and interpretations of landscape learning from the movement of the first pre-modern humans into Europe to the English colonists at Jamestown.