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Keeping It Living : Traditions of Plant Use and Cultivation on the Northwest Coast of North America
Keeping It Living : Traditions of Plant Use and Cultivation on the Northwest Coast of North America
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ISBN No.: 9780774812665
Pages: 384
Year: 200510
Format: Trade Cloth (Hard Cover)
Price: $ 92.46
Status: Out Of Print

This treatment of historically neglected yet compelling topics provides a welcome contribution to the literature on the subject.[the book is written in a manner that should appeal to a wide range of readers, including many who will appreciate its regional approach. Those with interests in ethnobotany, indigenous American studies, general history, and most importantly with a desire to more fully comprehend the pre-contact realities of human landscape interactions and what they mean today for the future, will surely find this book of much value.-- Brian D. Compton, Northwest Indian College, Discovery, v. 35, n.1, Spring 2006[Of all the ways that B.C.


#146;s aboriginal people have been imagined, represented, described, and understood, the one characterization that has persisted is the idea that they just weren#146;t the sort of people who transformed landscapes the way Europeans did. They didn#146;t cultivate plants or tend crops. That last and most persistent misapprehension was already entrenched as a tenet of academic faith in the earliest days of Northwest Coast anthropology but is only now being thoroughly reconsidered, thanks largely to Nancy J. Turner, a U.Vic ethnobotanist of boundless energy and curiosity. For her efforts, Turner is beloved among dozens of British Columbia#146;s aboriginal communities. With Keeping It Living,Turner and co-editor Douglas Deur of the University of Washington have mustered a broad body of evidence that is a full-on assault upon the hunter-gatherer orthodoxy. Joined by a dozen other academics whose contributions enliven this book, Turner and Deur present a picture of aboriginal life that is utterly different from the sort found in the conventional literature.


-- Terry Glavin, Georgia Straight, April 2006This book is the first comprehensive examination of how the first people to inhabit what is now the Pacific Northwest managed the land on which they lived.-- Dan Hays, Statesman Journal, Sunday, March 26, 2006Rarely does a collection of essays provide a cohesive and convincing argument, but Keeping it Livingaccomplishes this admirably.Undoubtedly, this fine collection can be used by other scholars to consider later developments.-- Brendan Lindsay, University of California, Riverside, Pacific Northwest Quarterly, Spring 2006.


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