Hum Core | Spring 2011 | Unit 2

 

Societies in Conflict

Humans, the Natural World and the Shifting Boundaries Between Them

 

Lecture 10. Colonial Contexts of Knowledge Acquisition

Key vocabulary terms underlined

 

Goals

            The mutual development of colonialism and science

                        “Western” pursuit of knowledge

Compare projects of Kolb, Sparrman, Bleek

Interpreting primary sources: specific comparisons

“Change over time” as historian’s mantra

 

A brief history of science (in Western Europe)

            Increasing specialization of knowledge

                        Natural history

                        Botany and zoology (gardens, herbariums, menageries)

                        Linguistics, folklore, ethnography

            Sustained theme: interplay between nature, divinity, and knowledge

 

 A brief history of European expansion (in Atlantic and Indian Ocean regions)

            Observation, documentation, and sailing technologies

                        Astronomy, cartography, and navigation

            Sites of encounter

                        Landfall, trading posts, settlements

            Collecting treasures

                        Commodities, people (labor), specimens

 

South African encounters

            One site among many

            Specific attractions and accessibility

               

Peter Kolb’s ethnography

 

Anders Sparrman’s natural history

 

Wilhelm Bleek’s linguistics

 

NB: In the full body of their work, Kolb, Sparrman and Bleek cross “disciplinary” boundaries, writing about geography, plants, animals and people. The sources selected for this class represent some specific differences, but should not be presumed to characterize each writer’s total approach to describing and trying to make sense of what they saw in South Africa.