Bookbot

Nancy J. Turner

    Nancy Turner è un'etnobotanica il cui lavoro collega ponderatamente le discipline della botanica e dell'ecologia con l'antropologia, la geografia e la linguistica. È profondamente interessata ai sistemi di conoscenza tradizionali e alle pratiche di gestione del territorio e delle risorse dei Popoli Indigeni, con un focus particolare sul Canada occidentale. La sua ricerca illumina le intricate e profonde connessioni tra cultura e mondo naturale. Esplora come la conoscenza tradizionale modella le prospettive sull'ambiente e sulla sua sostenibilità.

    Food Plants of Coastal First Peoples
    Ancient Pathways, Ancestral Knowledge
    • Ancient Pathways, Ancestral Knowledge

      Ethnobotany and Ecological Wisdom of Indigenous Peoples of Northwestern North America

      • 1056pagine
      • 37 ore di lettura

      Nancy Turner has dedicated over forty years to studying Indigenous peoples' knowledge of plants and environments in northwestern North America. In this two-volume work, she integrates extensive research, drawing on insights from Indigenous botanical experts, ethnographic records, linguistics, palaeobotany, archaeology, and more. Turner presents a nuanced understanding of how Indigenous inhabitants engaged with their environments, managed plant resources, and maintained habitats that supported their cultures for millennia. She highlights the transmission of knowledge across generations and communities, emphasizing the values and perspectives that shape Indigenous ethnobotanical practices. Volume 1 offers a historical overview of ethnobotanical knowledge before and after European contact, examining how Indigenous peoples utilized plants for nutrition, technology, and medicine. Turner compares over 250 plant species' names across more than fifty Indigenous languages, illustrating the cultural significance of certain plants and the exchange of goods and ideas. She also addresses the impact of introduced species and colonialism on Indigenous ecologies. Volume 2 details the development of Indigenous organizational systems for harvesting and cultivating plants, fostering economic connections across cultures, and managing resources. Turner explores the worldviews that arise from the relationship between people and plants, expressed

      Ancient Pathways, Ancestral Knowledge
      4,6
    • Food Plants of Coastal First Peoples

      • 180pagine
      • 7 ore di lettura

      Reprint of the revision of the 1975 edition. Each plant is illustrated in color with scientific name, family, a botanical description, habitat, distribution and its uses with warnings about similar, injurious, species. Annotation copyrighted by Book News, Inc., Portland, OR

      Food Plants of Coastal First Peoples
      4,3