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Imagining Serengeti: A History of Landscape Memory in Tanzania from Earliest Time to the Present
 
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Imagining Serengeti: A History of Landscape Memory in Tanzania from Earliest Time to the Present [Hardcover]

Jan Bender Shetler

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Product Details

  • Hardcover: 392 pages
  • Publisher: Ohio University Press; 1 edition (Jun 12 2007)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0821417495
  • ISBN-13: 978-0821417492
  • Product Dimensions: 2.3 x 1.6 x 0.3 cm
  • Shipping Weight: 658 g

Product Description

Review

“The Serengeti ecosystem is a symbol of global conservation efforts, but in conservationist literature the agricultural and agro-pastoral peoples who lived on the western reaches of the ecosystem became little more than ‘poachers’ who had no legitimate claim to the land or resources of the park. In this fascinating book on a topic of importance to specialists in several different fields, Jan Bender Shetler attempts to provide a corrective to this perception.”
—Gregory H. Maddox, coeditor of Custodians of the Land: Ecology & Culture in the History of Tanzania

Product Description

Long before the creation of the Serengeti National Park in Tanzania, the people of the western Serengeti had established settlements and interacted with the environment in ways that created a landscape we now misconstrue as natural. Western Serengeti peoples imagine the environment not as a pristine wilderness, but as a differentiated social landscape that embodies their history and identity. Conservationist literature has ignored these now-displaced peoples and relegated them to the margins of modern society. Their oral traditions, however, provide the means for seeing the landscape from a new perspective.

Imagining Serengeti allows us to see the Serengeti landscape as a book of memory that preserves the ways in which western Serengeti peoples have actively transformed their environment and their societies. Moreover, it strengthens the case for involving local communities in conservation efforts that will preserve African environments for the future. Using a new methodology to analyze precolonial oral traditions, Jan Shetler identifies core spatial images, which are then recontextualized into historical time periods through the use of archaeological, linguistic, ethnographic, ecological, and archival evidence. Imagining Serengeti reconstructs a socioenvironmental history of landscape memory of the western Serengeti spanning the last eighteen hundred years.

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