Office
Hours EPS 2.204
Ethnobotany, is the
interdisciplinary field that studies the relationships between humans and plants. It is not simply the study of plants that
are useful to humans, but rather includes the placement of plants within their
total cultural context in particular societies. It includes the ways that humans perceive the different kinds of
plants, the ways they classify plants, the things they do to plants (such as
destroying "weeds", protecting certain "wild" plants, and
"domesticating" and planting specific kinds of food and medicinal
plants), and the ways in which various members of the plant world influence
humans and their lifeways. This course
proposes to introduce the student to such general topics as systems of plant classification and nomenclature, plants
and archeaology, plant cultivation, food plants,
medicinal plants, entheogenic plants and divination, plants in cosmology and
religion, plants in construction and furniture, plants in clothing and
ornament, plants in discourse, plants and the question of pre-Columbian
contacts, and the impact of humans on plants (including forest
management). These topics will be
explored in a seminar format and often exemplified from a perspective of indigenous
Mesoamerican communities. No knowledge
of botany is presupposed or required.
Pollan,
Michael 2001. The Botany of Desire. [BOD]
Recommended:
Michael J. Balick,
Paul A. Cox 1997. Plants,
People and
Culture : The Science of Ethnobotany, a Scientific
American Library Book
(Paperback Textbook, 1997)
Nabhan,
Gary 2004. Some Like it Hot.
Island Press
ISBN 1-59726-091-6
Richard Evans Schultes & Siri von Reis 1995. Ethnobotany:
Evolution of a Discipline. Dioscorides Press/Timber Press [RES]
GN
476.73 E84 1995 PCL Stacks
Beryl Simpson and
Olga Conner-Ogorzaly 1986, 1994, or 2000.
Economic
Botany: Plants in Our World.
Anthony Huxley.
1974. Plant and Planet. Viking Press. [AH]
Herbert G.
Baker. 1970. Plants and Civilization. Wadsworth [HB]
REQUIREMENTS -
Research paper up to 20 pages,
weekly reading, class participation
including presentation of small topical research projects (using only the
internet).
Bibliography
(Mesoamerican Ethnobotany)
Bibliography
2 (Ethnobotany)