Hum Core | Spring 2011 | Unit 2

 

Societies in Conflict

Humans, the Natural World and the Shifting Boundaries Between Them

 

Lecture 11. Reading Colonial Landscapes

Key vocabulary terms underlined

 

Goals

            Changes in the practice of Western/Colonial science

            Interrogate the boundary between people and nature

Archaeology (as science) in the Western Cape:

evidence of people and culture embedded in the natural world

            Compare different ways of using and interpreting rock art as evidence

            Posing humanities research questions 

 

Colonial Science: questions of research collaborators and research subjects

            Bleek & Lloyd’s work          

Linguistics and ethnography overlap/transition

Scientists’ research notes become historian’s archive
||Kabbo’s collaboration

            Khoisan as research subjects: Kolb

            Khoisan and other Africans as subordinated research facilitators: Sparrman

            San individuals as active participants in the research process: Bleek & Lloyd

                        Science replicates social hierarchy and privilege

                                    Significance of Bleek & Lloyd co-authoring

                                    ||Kabbo is not a listed co-author

 

Colonial Science: observations of nature & observations of people

Kolb

Le Vaillant, Barrow

Sparrman

Bleek & Lloyd

South African Museum; 19th C. phrenology, physiology

 

Archaeology (as science) in the Western Cape

            Archaeological methods

            Archaeological signatures of hunters/foragers, herders, farmers

            Comparing rock art and material culture as archaeological evidence

            What can Parkington, Manhire & Yates conclude from the art?

            What do other scholars say about the art?

            What can a historian say about archaeological evidence or conclusions?

 

Reading Colonial Landscapes

            Western observers seeing what they want to see

                        Observation is conditioned by expectations

            Landscapes with or without people?

                        If people, which people?