Societies in Conflict

Humans, the Natural World and the Shifting Boundaries Between Them

 

Lecture 8: Hunters, Herders, Farmers and Nature

Key vocabulary terms underlined

 

Cultural and material approaches to history

            Historical materialism (example from Berger, p. 309)

 

Khoisan cosmology

Origin stories

            “Eland” and “Mantis” figures | The Great Thirst

            Evidence of beliefs and practices among colonial-era Khoisan

Tripartite world

Human-animal reciprocity

Human-animal “transferability”

            The Lion and the Jackals

 

Reading sources

Comparing story forms: Great Thirst & Lion/Jackals

               

Christian cosmology through the lens of the NGK (Nederlandse Gereformeerde

                        Kerk/Dutch Reformed Church)

            Multiple visions of Christianity

            Evidence of beliefs and practices of 18th-C Dutch colonists

            Tripartite world

            Hierarchical                                                                    

                        Great Chain of Being | Psalm 8

 

Khoisan Land Use

            Nomadic: water | game routes | maritime resources

San: Evidence of repeated use of the same rock shelters

Khoikhoi: regular transhumance patterns

Seasonal congregations of mobile groups of people

Khoikhoi measures of wealth: livestock

 

Settler Land Use

            Extensive grazing AND settled agriculture

            Permanent, individual, alienable property rights

                        Freehold land grants and “loan farms”

            Measures of wealth: land | livestock | slaves | material culture

            Trekboer livelihood similar to Khoisan

                        Emphasis on historical interpretation

 

Factors that shaped South African history (and developing historical arguments)

            Forced labor controlled by individual violence (Berger)

            The “frontier” experience of hardy settlers (Apartheid-era nationalist history)

            Struggles over the use and meaning of natural resources (Mitchell)