Societies in Conflict
Humans, the Natural World, and the Shifting
Boundaries Between Them
Learning
objectives for the unit
By the end
of week 6, students should be able substantiate or refute the following claims
by using specific empirical evidence drawn from the assigned reading.
- There are multiple ways for
human societies to understand “nature.”
- The differentiation between
humans and the natural world—and understandings of nature—are culturally
constructed and historically specific.
- Western science is one among
many ways of approaching/understanding nature, and not a universal truth.
- Contested ideas about
nature—including appropriate uses of natural resources and definitions of
human-nature connections—were a significant terrain of colonial
interactions.
Students
should also be able to describe how historians ask questions and gather
evidence to construct answers.
Questions
for Week 5: Colonial Visions of Nature
- Why did both Khoisan and settlers make claims to
many of the same locations?
- Why were these sites of material importance to
Khoisan? Why were they of cultural importance to Khoisan?
- Based on your reading of Lochner’s loan farm
permit for Brakfontein, what
factors were important in European claims to land?
- Who
was the intended audience for
- Peter Kolb’s The Present State of the Cape of Good Hope?
- Anders Sparrman’s A Voyage to the Cape of Good Hope?
- Wilhelm Bleek’s “Scientific Reasons for the
Study of the Bushman Language”?
- Kolb clearly conveys his opinions to his
readers. What aspects of Khoikhoi culture does he admire? What elements
does he criticize? Why would he go into such great detail about the ways
in which Khoikhoi take care of their domesticated animals?
- Is there a difference in Kolb’s descriptions of
Khoikhoi practices and those of colonists?
- How does Sparrman’s description of Khoisan
differ from Kolb’s? What are the implications of Sparrman’s decision to
focus on a different set of human interactions with the natural world?
- Why
does Bleek think the study of Khoisan language is important?
- Relevant recent news stories: origins of
language in Africa, NY
Times; language change as historical evidence (and biology v. culture
debate), LA
Times
- What are the implications of whether European
observers chose to focus on ethnography, or biology, or language, in their
efforts to understand and portray Africa
to European audiences?
- Why in the context of eighteenth-century
colonial interactions was it difficult for settlers and Khoisan to see the
commonalities in their understandings of nature? Why were the differences
in their understanding of nature significant?