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.
Students should also be able
to describe how historians ask questions and gather evidence to construct
answers.
Questions
for Week 6:
Khoisan Legacies and Colonial Appropriations of Nature
·
Why are
people, including scholars, artists, political activists, interested in
interpreting the rock art of the Western Cape?
·
What
sources do they turn to for help understanding the process of artistic
production, and the meaning of the art?
·
What
conclusions do Parkington, Manhire, and Yates draw from the art?
·
How do
their conclusions differ from those of J.D. Lewis-Williams (covered in
lecture)?
·
How have
Khoisan been understood to represent “nature” in various Western perspectives?
·
Are some
societies more intimately connected to nature than others? What are the
political implications of choosing a side in this debate?
·
What
were the long-term repercussions of struggles over nature? Does it matter that
tensions between Khoisan and settlers revolved around understandings of nature?
·
In what
ways do cultural understandings of nature continue to be important for South
African history after Khoisan were effectively eliminated as competition for
resources?