List of Tables
Orthography
Introduction
1. The Rio Nunez Region: A Small Corner of West Africa's Rice Coast
Region
2. The First-Comers and the Roots of Coastal Rice-growing
Technology
3. The Newcomers and the Seeds of Tidal Rice-Growing Technology
4. Coastal Collaboration and Specialization: Flowering of Tidal
Rice-Growing Technologies
5. The Strangers and the Branches of Coastal Rice-growing
Technology, c.1500 to 1800
6. Feeding the Slave Trade: The Trade in Rice and Captives from
West Africa's Rice Coast
Conclusion
Appendix I.1 Fieldwork Interviews
Appendix I.2 Rice Terminology in Atlantic Languages Spoken in the
Coastal Rio Nunez Region
Notes
Bibliography
Index
Edda L. Fields-Black is an associate professor at Carnegie Mellon University, specializing in pre-colonial and West African history. With research interests extending into the African diaspora, for more than 15 years Fields-Black has traveled to and lived in Guinea, Sierra Leone, South Carolina, and Georgia to uncover the history of African rice farmers and rice cultures.
"Fields-Black (history, Carnegie-Mellon Univ.) digs out key periods
in the technological history of West Africa's coastal littoral by
focusing on historical linguistics and tracing environmentally
specific knowledge and its use in tidewater rice farming. Despite
the potentially esoteric focus on the precolonial (first
millennium) history of a sub-region of West Africa and the use of
specialist methodologies, Fields-Black manages to make her research
and its implications accessible to a wider audience. The volume's
final chapter on the African diaspora is a bridge between
precolonial coastal Africa and the technology of the American South
in the slave trade era explored by Judith Carney in Black Rice: The
African Origins of Rice Cultivation in the Americas (CH, Oct'01,
39-0928). Readers will appreciate the book's clarity of expression
and revealing discussions of historical analysis and argumentation.
The author's interdisciplinary and comparative approaches challenge
archaeological theories of diffusion from the inland Niger Delta to
the 'rice coast' and sharpen the understanding of technology
transfer and dynamic cultural change in the Atlantic era. Summing
Up: Recommended. Research and classroom use at undergraduate and
graduate levels. — Choice"—C. L. Goucher, Washington State
University, December 2009
"This study is an excellent contribution to the growing literature
on food in precolonial Africa. . . . [I]t is a trailblazing work in
its innovative amalgamation of archaeological, linguistic, and
written source materials."—Jeremy Rich, Middle Tennessee State
University, Vol. 42.2 2009
"This study is an excellent contribution to the growing literature
on food in precolonial Africa. . . . [I]t is a trailblazing work in
its innovative amalgamation of archaeological, linguistic, and
written source materials."—International Journal of African
Historical Studies
"Deep Roots, an important and innovative book, pioneers a
multidisciplinary methodology, which substantially compensates for
the lack of written documentation . . . and archeology data during
the formative period of the transatlantic slave trade in
Africa."—American Historical Review
"Fields-Black has written an important book, thoroughly researched,
persuasively argued, and engagingly written. It adds a major new
chapter to our understanding of the African diaspora. Vol. 76, No.
3, August 2010"—The Journal of Southern History
"Fields-Black has written an important groundbreaking agricultural
and Diasporic cultural history."—Georgia Historical Quarterly
"A stimulating study that deserves attention in graduate seminars .
. . in African history . . . and in African diaspora studies.
December, 2010"—HISTORIAN
"While Deep Roots is a scholarly endeavor anyone interested in
South Carolina's rice history or African history would find it both
fascinating and full of interesting facts, stories, illustrations
and graphs that bring the story to life.February 18,
2009"—Walterboro, SC
"Fields-Black manages to make her research and its implications
accessible to a wider audience. . . . Readers will appreciate the
book's clarity of expression and revealing discussions of
historical analysis and argumentation. . . . Recommended.December
2009"—Choice
"[This] book makes a significant contribution to our understanding
of rice cultivation in West Africa . . . .Vol. 50 2009"—Erik
Gilbert, Arkansas State University
"In fine, Deep Roots represents an important contribution to the
literature on risiculture in West Africa.XL.4 Spring 2010"—Peter A.
Coclanis, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
"Deep Roots is a valuable addition to research on African rice
systems and their origins. ...it contributes to the understanding
of the rich cultural diversity of the coastal region extending from
Gambia south and east to Liberia. Vol. 53.1 April 2010"—Laurence C.
Becker, Oregon State University, Corvallis, Oregon
"The scope of the work makes it an important addition for African
and Diaspora studies, as well as those more generally interested in
the transference of ideas and ecology."—Journal of West African
History
"An imaginative book . . . The writing is good and the ideas
important."—Judith Carney, author of Black Rice: The African
Origins of Rice Cultivation in the Americas
"Fields-Black . . . offers important new insights into West African
agricultural history and the dynamics of diasporic
connections."—LaRay Denzer, Northwestern University
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