Economic Botany of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries was an enormously effective colonizing force, whose power I would suggest, lay in the de-personalizing nature of its discourse and its nominative function. The botanical re-naming of plants indigenous to the new world had the effect of erasing all historical claim to ownership by disrupting the original relationship between nature and culture. A process of naming that laid claim to an objective and universalizing relationship between the man of science and his botanical specimen was an effective colonizing tool in which tropical plants were dispersed and displaced from their naturai and cultural habitation to be reimagined and re-planted as commercial commodity. Olive Senior\u27s...
The bush garden ethos in South Australia, notwithstanding the state\u27s dearth of water, poor soils...
In this book, historical narratives chart how people created forms of agriculture in the highlands o...
This paper explores a tension between the pleasures of gardening and the colonial legacy of botany a...
Respect for any form of life entails nurturing all the potentialities proper to it, including those ...
Most references to the Banyan tree (ficus bengaliensis) cite the huge specimen in the Calcutta Botan...
237 pagesThis dissertation examines how the vegetal ecosystems of the Caribbean continue to enact th...
Western culture invests gardens with powerful, if ambivalent symbolism. They invite us to commune wi...
One of the reasons frequently given for large family size in traditional societies in developing cou...
This paper draws on archival research to trace the techniques used by scientists and government offi...
This is a story about people and plants. About the power of relationships between floral organisms a...
Three booklets and a printed map, designed as a pocket sized package, printed on a Risograph printer...
The St. Vincent Botanical Garden was established in 1765 as the first Botanical Garden in the Caribb...
Abstract: Decolonization influenced the rise of environmental activism and thought in Australia and ...
In tropical Africa, traditional shifting cultivation can no longer provide sufficient food for the r...
This contribution explains three aspects of the development of botanical knowledge between the thirt...
The bush garden ethos in South Australia, notwithstanding the state\u27s dearth of water, poor soils...
In this book, historical narratives chart how people created forms of agriculture in the highlands o...
This paper explores a tension between the pleasures of gardening and the colonial legacy of botany a...
Respect for any form of life entails nurturing all the potentialities proper to it, including those ...
Most references to the Banyan tree (ficus bengaliensis) cite the huge specimen in the Calcutta Botan...
237 pagesThis dissertation examines how the vegetal ecosystems of the Caribbean continue to enact th...
Western culture invests gardens with powerful, if ambivalent symbolism. They invite us to commune wi...
One of the reasons frequently given for large family size in traditional societies in developing cou...
This paper draws on archival research to trace the techniques used by scientists and government offi...
This is a story about people and plants. About the power of relationships between floral organisms a...
Three booklets and a printed map, designed as a pocket sized package, printed on a Risograph printer...
The St. Vincent Botanical Garden was established in 1765 as the first Botanical Garden in the Caribb...
Abstract: Decolonization influenced the rise of environmental activism and thought in Australia and ...
In tropical Africa, traditional shifting cultivation can no longer provide sufficient food for the r...
This contribution explains three aspects of the development of botanical knowledge between the thirt...
The bush garden ethos in South Australia, notwithstanding the state\u27s dearth of water, poor soils...
In this book, historical narratives chart how people created forms of agriculture in the highlands o...
This paper explores a tension between the pleasures of gardening and the colonial legacy of botany a...