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Where The Redwinged Blackbirds Sing The Akimel Oodham And Cycles Of Agricultural Transformation In The Phoenix Basin Jennifer Bess

  • SKU: BELL-23975520
Where The Redwinged Blackbirds Sing The Akimel Oodham And Cycles Of Agricultural Transformation In The Phoenix Basin Jennifer Bess
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Where The Redwinged Blackbirds Sing The Akimel Oodham And Cycles Of Agricultural Transformation In The Phoenix Basin Jennifer Bess instant download after payment.

Publisher: University Press of Colorado
File Extension: EPUB
File size: 3.78 MB
Pages: 436
Author: Jennifer Bess
ISBN: 9781646420827, 1646420829
Language: English
Year: 2021

Product desciption

Where The Redwinged Blackbirds Sing The Akimel Oodham And Cycles Of Agricultural Transformation In The Phoenix Basin Jennifer Bess by Jennifer Bess 9781646420827, 1646420829 instant download after payment.

Where the Red-Winged Blackbirds Sing examines the ways in which the Akimel O’odham (“River People”) and their ancestors, the Huhugam, adapted to economic, political, and environmental constraints imposed by federal Indian policy, the Indian Bureau, and an encroaching settler population in Arizona’s Gila River Valley. Fundamental to O’odham resilience was their connection to their sense of peoplehood and their himdag (“lifeway”), which culminated in the restoration of their water rights and a revitalization of their Indigenous culture.
 
Author Jennifer Bess examines the Akimel O’odham’s worldview, which links their origins with a responsibility to farm the Gila River Valley and to honor their history of adaptation and obligations as “world-builders”—co-creators of an evermore life-sustaining environment and participants in flexible networks of economic exchange. Bess considers this worldview in context of the Huhugam–Akimel O’odham agricultural economy over more than a thousand years. Drawing directly on Akimel O’odham traditional ecological knowledge, innovations, and interpretive strategies in archives and interviews, Bess shows how the Akimel O’odham engaged in agricultural economy for the sake of their lifeways, collective identity, enduring future, and actualization of the values modeled in their sacred stories.
 
Where the Red-Winged Blackbirds Sing highlights the values of adaptation, innovation, and co-creation fundamental to Akimel O’odham lifeways and chronicles the contributions the Akimel O’odham have made to American history and to the history of agriculture. The book will be of interest to scholars of Indigenous, American Southwestern, and agricultural history.
 

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