Domesticating the World

Domesticating the World
Author: Jeremy Prestholdt
Publsiher: Univ of California Press
Total Pages: 288
Release: 2008-01-15
Genre: History
ISBN: 9780520254244

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“ Ingeniously stands the study of globalization and trade on its head.”—Edward Alpers, Chair of Department of History, UCLA

Domesticating the World

Domesticating the World
Author: Jeremy Prestholdt
Publsiher: Univ of California Press
Total Pages: 289
Release: 2008-01-15
Genre: History
ISBN: 9780520941472

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This book boldly unsettles the idea of globalization as a recent phenomenon—and one driven solely by Western interests—by offering a compelling new perspective on global interconnectivity in the nineteenth century. Jeremy Prestholdt examines East African consumers' changing desires for material goods from around the world in an era of sweeping social and economic change. Exploring complex webs of local consumer demands that affected patterns of exchange and production as far away as India and the United States, the book challenges presumptions that Africa's global relationships have always been dictated by outsiders. Full of rich and often-surprising vignettes that outline forgotten trajectories of global trade and consumption, it powerfully demonstrates how contemporary globalization is foreshadowed in deep histories of intersecting and reciprocal relationships across vast distances.

Animals as Domesticates

Animals as Domesticates
Author: Juliet Clutton-Brock
Publsiher: MSU Press
Total Pages: 335
Release: 2012-01-01
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 9781609173142

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Drawing on the latest research in archaeozoology, archaeology, and molecular biology, Animals as Domesticates traces the history of the domestication of animals around the world. From the llamas of South America and the turkeys of North America, to the cattle of India and the Australian dingo, this fascinating book explores the history of the complex relationships between humans and their domestic animals. With expert insight into the biological and cultural processes of domestication, Clutton-Brock suggests how the human instinct for nurturing may have transformed relationships between predator and prey, and she explains how animals have become companions, livestock, and laborers. The changing face of domestication is traced from the spread of the earliest livestock around the Neolithic Old World through ancient Egypt, the Greek and Roman empires, South East Asia, and up to the modern industrial age.

Domesticating Youth

Domesticating Youth
Author: Sophie Roche
Publsiher: Berghahn Books
Total Pages: 292
Release: 2014-03-30
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 9781782382638

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Most of the Muslim societies of the world have entered a demographic transition from high to low fertility, and this process is accompanied by an increase in youth vis-à-vis other age groups. Political scientists and historians have debated whether such a "youth bulge" increases the potential for conflict or whether it represents a chance to accumulate wealth and push forward social and technological developments. This book introduces the discussion about youth bulge into social anthropology using Tajikistan, a post-Soviet country that experienced civil war in the 1990s, which is in the middle of such a demographic transition. Sophie Roche develops a social anthropological approach to analyze demographic and political dynamics, and suggests a new way of thinking about social change in youth bulge societies.

Domesticating Electricity

Domesticating Electricity
Author: Graeme Gooday
Publsiher: Routledge
Total Pages: 303
Release: 2015-07-22
Genre: History
ISBN: 9781317314028

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A socio-cultural study of the history of electricity during the late Victorian and Edward periods. It shows how technology, authority and gender interacted in pre-World War I Britain.

Domesticating the Invisible

Domesticating the Invisible
Author: Melissa S. Ragain
Publsiher: University of California Press
Total Pages: 264
Release: 2021-01-12
Genre: Art
ISBN: 9780520343825

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Domesticating the Invisible examines how postwar notions of form developed in response to newly perceived environmental threats, in turn inspiring artists to model plastic composition on natural systems often invisible to the human eye. Melissa S. Ragain focuses on the history of art education in Cambridge, Massachusetts, to understand how an environmental approach to form inspired new art programs at Harvard and MIT. As they embraced scientistic theories of composition, these institutions also cultivated young artists as environmental agents who could influence urban design and contribute to an ecologically sensitive public sphere. Ragain combines institutional and intellectual histories to map how the emergency of environmental crisis altered foundational modernist assumptions about form, transforming questions about aesthetic judgment into questions about an ethical relationship to the environment.

Domesticating Foreign Struggles

Domesticating Foreign Struggles
Author: Paola Gemme
Publsiher: University of Georgia Press
Total Pages: 217
Release: 2011-12-01
Genre: History
ISBN: 9780820343419

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When antebellum Americans talked about the contemporary struggle for Italian unification (the Risorgimento), they were often saying more about themselves than about Italy. In Domesticating Foreign Struggles Paola Gemme unpacks the American cultural record on the Risorgimento not only to make sense of the U.S. engagement with the broader world but also to understand the nation’s domestic preoccupations. Swayed by the myth of the United States as a catalyst of and model for global liberal movements, says Gemme, Americans saw parallels to their own history in the Risorgimento--and they said as much in newspapers, magazines, travel accounts, diplomatic dispatches, poems, maps, and paintings. And yet, in American eyes, Italians were too civically deficient to ever achieve republican goals. Such a view, says Gemme, reaffirmed cherished beliefs both in the United States as the center of world events and in the notion of American exceptionalism. Gemme argues that Americans also pondered the place of “subordinate” ethnic groups in domestic culture--especially Irish Catholic immigrants and enslaved African Americans--through the discourse on Risorgimento Italy. Thus, says Gemme, national identity rested not only on differentiation from outside groups but also on a desire for internal racial and cultural homogeneity. Writing in a tradition pioneered by Amy Kaplan, Richard Slotkin, and others, Gemme advances the movement to “internationalize” American studies by situating the United States in its global cultural context.

Domesticating Forests How Farmers Manage Forest Resources

Domesticating Forests  How Farmers Manage Forest Resources
Author: Geneviève Michon
Publsiher: CIFOR
Total Pages: 204
Release: 2005-01-01
Genre: Agroforestry
ISBN: 9789793361659

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