Jungle
Page 40
20. Crosby, A. F. 2004. Ecological Imperialism: The Biological Expansion of Europe, 900–1900 (2nd edition). Austin: University of Texas Press; Brown, K. W. 2012. A History of Mining in Latin America: From the Colonial Era to the Present. Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press; de Araujo Shellard, A. H. 2016. History of the colonization of Minas Gerais: An environmental approach. In E. Vaz, C. Joanaz de Melo, L. Pinto Costa (eds.). Environmental History in the Making. Environmental History 6. Cham: Springer. Pp. 243–257; Hagan, N., et al. 2011. Estimating historical atmospheric mercury concentrations from silver mining and their legacies in present-day surface soil in Potosí, Bolivia. Atmospheric Environment 45: 7619–7626.
21. Miller, S. W. 2007. An Environmental History of Latin America. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press; Barretto-Tesoro, G., Hernandez, V. 2017. Power and resilience: Flooding and occupation in a late-nineteenth-century Philippine town. In C. Beaule (ed.). Frontiers of Colonialism. Gainesville: University Press of Florida. Pp. 149–178; Cushner, N. P. 1971. Spain in the Philippines: From Conquest to Revolution. Quezon City: Ateneo de Manila University; Gerona, D. M. 2001. The colonial accommodation and reconstitution of native elite in early provincial Philippines, 1600–1795. In M. D. E. Pérez-Grueso, J. M. Fradera, L. A. Alvarez (eds.). Imperios y naciones en el Pacifico. Madrid: Consejo, Superior de Investigaciones Cientificas. Pp 265–276.
22. Moore, J. W. 2009. Madeira, sugar, and the conquest of nature in the “first” sixteenth century. Part I: From “Island of timber” to sugar revolution, 1420–1506. Review (Fernand Braudel Center) 32: 345–390; Moore, J. W. 2000. Sugar and the expansion of the early modern world-economy: Commodity frontiers, ecological transformation, and industrialisation. Review (Fernand Braudel Center) 23: 409–433; Dannenfeldt, K. H. 1985. Europe discovers civet cats and civet. Journal of the History of Biology 18: 403–431.
23. Polónia, A., Pacheco, J. M. 2017. Environmental impacts of colonial dynamics, 1400–1800: The first global age and the Anthropocene. In G. Austin (ed.). Economic Development and Environmental History in the Anthropocene: Perspectives on Asia and Africa. London: Bloomsbury. Pp. 23–49; Teixeira, D. M., Papabero, N. 2010. O tráfico de primatas brasileiros nos séculos XVI e XVII. In L. M. Pessôa, W. C. Tavares, S. Salvatore (eds.). Mamíferos de restingas e manguezais do Brasil. Rio de Janeiro: Sociedade Brasileira de Mastozoologia & Museu Nacional da UFRJ. Pp. 253–282; Beaule, C. D., Douglas, J. G. (eds.). 2020. The Global Spanish Empire: Five Hundred Years of Place Making and Pluralism. Tucson: University of Arizona Press.
24. Reed, R. R. 1978. Colonial Manila: The Context of Hispanic Urbanism and Process of Morphogenesis. Berkeley: University of California Press; Acabado, S. 2017. The archaeology of pericolonialism: Responses of the “unconquered” to Spanish conquest and colonialism in Ifugao, Philippines. International Journal of Historical Archaeology 21: 1–26; Bankoff, G. 2013. Deep forestry: Shapers of the Philippine forests. Environmental History 18: 523–556.
25. Associated Press. 2020. Columbus statue removed in Mexico City, defaced elsewhere. Northwest Arkanasas Democrat Gazette. October 13. www.nwaonline.com/news/2020/oct/13/columbus-statue-removed-in-mexico-city-defaced; Lowrey, M. M. 2020. Why more places are abandoning Columbus Day in favour of Indigenous Peoples’ Day. The Conversation. October 5. https://theconversation.com/why-more-places-are-abandoning-columbus-day-in-favor-of-indigenous-peoples-day-124481; Vink, M. 2003. “The world’s oldest trade”: Dutch slavery and slave trade in the Indian Ocean in the seventeenth century. Journal of World History 14: 131–177.
26. Wing, J. T. 2015. Roots of Empire: Forests and State Power in Early Modern Spain, c. 1500–1750. History of the Environment 4. Leiden: Brill; Miller, S. W. 2007. An Environmental History of Latin America. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press; Newson, L. A. 2009. Conquest and Pestilence in the Early Spanish Philippines. Manoa: University of Hawaii Press; Bjork, K. 1998. The link that kept the Philippines Spanish: Mexican merchant interests and the Manila trade, 1571–1815. Journal of World History 9: 25–50.
CHAPTER 11: GLOBALIZATION OF THE TROPICS
1. Church, J. A., White, N. J., Hunter, J. R. 2006. Sea-level rise at tropical Pacific and Indian Ocean islands. Global and Planetary Change 53: 155–186; Alroy, J. 2017. Effects of habitat disturbance on tropical forest biodiversity. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 114: 6056–6061; Corlett, R. T., Primack, R. 2011. Tropical Rain Forests: An Ecological and Biogeographical Comparison. London: Wiley-Blackwell.
2. Diamond, J. 1997. Guns, Germs, and Steel: The Fates of Human Societies. New York: W. W. Norton; Soule, E. B. 2018. From Africa to the Ocean Sea: Atlantic slavery in the origins of the Spanish Empire. Atlantic Studies 15: 16–39; von Humboldt, A. 1814–1829. Personal Narrative. Volume 4. Pp. 143–144. Cited in A. Wulf. 2015. The Invention of Nature: The Adventures of Alexander von Humboldt, the Lost Hero of Science. London: John Murray. Pp. 57–58; Morgan, P. D. 2009. Africa and the Atlantic, c. 1450–1820. In J. P. Greene, P. D. Morgan (eds.). Atlantic History: A Critical Appraisal. Oxford: Oxford University Press. Pp. 223–248; Martinez, J. S. The Slave Trade and the Origins of International Human Rights Law. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
3. Barquera, R., et al. 2020. Origin and health status of first-generation Africans from early colonial Mexico City. Current Biology 30(11): 2078–2091. doi: 10.1016/j.cub.2020.04.002; Schroeder, H., et al. 2015. Genome-wide ancestry of 17th-century enslaved Africans from the Caribbean. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 112: 3669–3673; Schroeder, H., O’Connell, T. C., Evans, J. A., Shuler, K. A., Hedges, R. E. M. 2009. Trans-Atlantic slavery: Isotopic evidence for forced migration to Barbados. American Journal of Physical Anthropology 139: 547–557.
4. Klein, H. S., Luna, F. V. 2009. Slavery in Brazil. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press; Mintz, S. 1986. Sweetness and Power: The Place of Sugar in Modern History. London: Penguin; Calderia, A. M. 2011. Learning the ropes in the tropics: Slavery and the plantation system on the island of São Tomé. African Economic History 39: 35–71; Borucki, A., Eltis, D., Wheat, D. 2015. Atlantic history and the slave trade to Spanish America. American Historical Review 120: 433–461; Mann, C. 2011. 1493: Uncovering the New World Columbus Created. New York: Vintage Books; Vink, M. 2003. “The world’s oldest trade”: Dutch slavery and slave trade in the Indian Ocean in the seventeenth century. Journal of World History 14: 131–177.
5. Shuler, K. A. 2011. Life and death on a Barbadian sugar plantation: Historic and bioarchaeological views of infection and mortality at Newton Plantation. International Journal of Osteoarchaeology 21: 66–81; Bethell, L. 1987. Colonial Brazil. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press; Emmer, P. C. 2006. The Dutch Slave Trade, 1500–1850. (Translated by C. Emery.) New York: Berghahn Books; Meniketti, M. 2006. Sugar mills, technology, and environmental change: A case study of colonial agro-industrial development in the Caribbean. IA: The Journal of the Society for Industrial Archaeology 32: 53–80; Fick, C. 2000. Emancipation in Haiti: From plantation labour to peasant proprietorship. Slavery & Abolition 21: 11–40; Morgan, K. 2007. Slavery and the British Empire: From Africa to America. Oxford: Oxford University Press; Allen, R. B. 2010. Satisfying the “want for labouring people”: European slave trading in the Indian Ocean, 1500–1850. Journal of World History 21: 45–73; Russell-Wood, A. J. R. 1977. Technology and society: The impact of gold mining on the institution of slavery in Portuguese America. Journal of Economic History 37: 59–83; Bradley, K., Cartledge, P. 2011. The Cambridge World History of Slavery. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press; Kelley, S. M. 2019. New world slave traders and the problem of trade in goods: Brazil, Barbados, Cuba, and North America in comparative perspective. English Historical Review 134: 302–333; Richardson, D., Schwarz, S., Tibbles, A. 2009. Liverpool and Transatlantic Slavery. Liverpool: Liverpool University Press; Barquera, R., et al. 2020. Origin and health status of first-generation Africans from early colonial Mexico City. Current Biology 30(11): 2078–2091. doi
: 10.1016/j.cub.2020.04.002.
6. Edwards, P., Rewt, P. 1994. The Letters of Ignartius Sancho. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, Letter 14, 56.
7. Williamson, K. 2019. Most slave shipwrecks have been overlooked—until now. National Geographic. August 23. www.nationalgeographic.com/culture/2019/08/most-slave-shipwrecks-overlooked-until-now; Inikori, Joseph. 2002. Africans and the Industrial Revolution in England: A Study in International Trade and Economic Development. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press; MacEachern, S. 2018. Searching for Boko Haram: A History of Violence in Central Africa. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
8. Bellagamba, A., Greene, S. E., Klein, M. A. (eds.). 2013. African Voices on Slavery and the Slave Trade. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press; Hicks, D. 2020. The Brutish Museums: The Benin Bronzes, Colonial Violence and Cultural Restitution. London: Pluto Press; Landers, J. 2007. Slavery in the Spanish Caribbean and the failure of abolition. Review (Fernand Braudel Center) 31: 343–371; Thornton, J. 1998. Africa and Africans in the Making of the Atlantic World, 1400–1800 (2nd edition). New York: Cambridge University Press; DeCorse, C. 2001. Introduction. In C. DeCorse (ed.). West Africa During the Atlantic Slave Trade: Archaeological Perspectives. Leicester: Leicester University Press. Pp. 1–13; Behrendt, S. D., Latham, A. J. H., Northrup, D. 2010. The Diary of Antera Duke: An Eighteenth-Century African Slave Trader. Oxford: Oxford University Press; Mitchell, P. 2005. African Connections: Archaeological Perspectives on Africa and the Wider World. Lanham: AltaMira Press; Williams, H. V. 2010. Queen Nzinga (Njinga Mbande). In L. M. Alexander, W. C. Rucker (eds.). Encyclopaedia of African American History. Santa Barbara: ABC-CLIO. Pp. 82–84.
9. Odewale, A. 2019. An archaeology of struggle: Material remnants of a double consciousness in the American South and Danish Caribbean communities. Transforming Anthropology 27: 114–132
10. Price, R (ed.). 1996. Maroon societies: Rebel slave communities in the Americas. Baltimore: John Hopkins University Press; Richardson, D. 2001. Shipboard revolutions, African authority, and the Atlantic slave trade. In New Perspectives on the Transatlantic Slave Trade. William and Mary Quarterly 58: 69–92; Diouf, S. A. 2016. Slavery’s Exiles: The Story of the American Maroons. New York: New York University Press; Schwartz, S. B. 2017. Rethinking Palmares: Slave resistance in colonial Brazil. In D. A. Pargas, F. Rosu, (eds.). Critical Readings on Global Slavery. Leiden: Brill. Pp. 1294–1325; Odewale, A. 2019. An archaeology of struggle: Material remnants of a double consciousness in the American South and Danish Caribbean communities. Transforming Anthropology 27: 114–132; Odewale, A., Foster II, T., Toress, J. M. 2017. In service to a Danish king: Comparing material culture of royal enslaved Afro-Caribbeans and Danish soldiers at the Christianised national historic site. Journal of African Diaspora Archaeology and Heritage 6: 1–39; Otele, O. 2020. African Europeans: An Untold History. London: Hurst Press; Nunn, N., Qian, N. 2010. The Columbian exchange: A history of disease, food, and ideas. Journal of Economic Perspectives 24: 163–188.
11. Hall, C. 2020. The slavery business and the making of “race” in Britain and the Caribbean. Current Anthropology 16. doi: 10.1086/709845; Meniketti, M. 2006. Sugar mills, technology, and environmental change: A case study of colonial agro-industrial development in the Caribbean. IA: The Journal of the Society for Industrial Archaeology 32: 53–80; Hersh, J., Voth, H.-J. 2009. Sweet diversity: Colonial goods and the rise of European living standards after 1492. SSRN. July 4. http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.1443730; Brunache, P. 2019. Mainstreaming African diasporic foodways when academia is not enough. Transforming Anthropology 27: 149–163; Brown, C. L. 2012. Moral Capital: Foundations of British Abolitionism. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press; Roscoe, P. 2020. How the shadow of slavery still hangs over global finance. The Conversation. August 21. https://theconversation.com/how-the-shadow-of-slavery-still-hangs-over-global-finance-144826.
12. Moore, J. W. 2000. Sugar and the expansion of the early modern world-economy: Commodity frontiers, ecological transformation, and industrialization. Review (Fernand Braudel Center) 23: 409–433; Barlow, V. 1993. The Nature of the Islands: Plants and Animals of the Eastern Caribbean. Dunedin: Chris Doyle Publishing; Meniketti, M. 2006. Sugar mills, technology, and environmental change: A case study of colonial agro-industrial development in the Caribbean. IA: The Journal of the Society for Industrial Archaeology 32: 53–80; Dunnavant, J. 2019. A historical ecology of slavery in the Danish West Indies. Talk given for UCI Media and posted to YouTube. www.youtube.com/watch?v=Q8oR_CPxkyQ&feature=youtu.be; Smith, F. H. 2009. Caribbean Rum: A Social and Economic History. Gainesville: University of Florida Press.
13. Baptist, E. E. 2016. The Half Has Never Been Told: Slavery and the Making of American Capitalism. London: Hachette; Riello, G. 2013. Cotton: The Fabric That Made the Modern World. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press; Menon, M., Uzramma. A Frayed History: The Journey of Cotton in India. Oxford: Oxford University Press; Beckett, S. 2016. Empire of Cotton: A Global History. London: Penguin Books; Tarlo, E. 1996. Clothing Matters: Dress and Identity in India. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
14. Behal, R. P. 2006. Power structure, discipline, and labour in Assam tea plantations under colonial rule. International Review of Social History 51: 143–172; Bandarage, A. 1983. Colonialism in Sri Lanka: The Political Economy of the Kandyan Highlands, 1833–1886. Berlin: Mouton Publishers; Chatterjee, P. 1995. “Secure this excellent class of labour”: Gender and race in labor recruitment for British Indian tea plantations. Bulletin of Concerned Asian Scholars 27: 43–56.
15. Topik, S. 1998. Coffee. In S. Topik, A. Wells (eds.). The Second Conquest of Latin America: Coffee, Henequen and Oil During the Export Boom, 1850–1930. Austin: University of Texas Press; Pomeranz, K., Topik, S. 2018. The World That Trade Created: Society, Culture, and the World Economy, 1400 to the Present (4th edition). New York: Routledge; Topik, S. 1999. Where is the coffee? Coffee and Brazilian identity. Luso-Brazilian Review 36: 87–92.
16. Hemming, J. 2009. Tree of Rivers: The Story of the Amazon. London: Thames and Hudson; Grandin, G. 2010. Fordlandia: The Rise and Fall of Henry Ford’s Forgotten Jungle City. London: Picador; Hemming, J. 2004. Amazon Frontier: Defeat of the Brazilian Indians. London: Pan MacMillan; Caetano Andrade, V. L., et al. 2019. Growth rings of Amazon nut trees (Bertholletia excelsa) as living record of historical human disturbance in central Amazonia. PLOS ONE 14(4): e0214128. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0214128.
17. Tully, J. 2011. The Devil’s Milk: A Social History of Rubber. New York: Monthly Review Press; Dean, W. 1987. Brazil and the Struggle for Rubber: A Study in Environmental History. New York: Cambridge University Press; Ross, C. 2017. Developing the rain forest: Rubber, environment and economy in Southeast Asia. In G. Austin (ed.). Economic Development and Environmental History in the Anthropocene: Perspectives on Asia and Africa. London: Bloomsbury. Pp. 199–218; Louis, W. R. 1964. Roger Casement and the Congo. Journal of African History 5: 99–120; Loadman, J. 2005. Tears of the Tree. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
18. Robins, J. E. 2018. Smallholders and machines in the West African palm oil industry, 1850–1950. African Economic History 46: 69–103; Mann, K. 2009. Owners, slaves, and the struggle for labour in the commercial transition at Lagos. In R. Law (ed.). From Slave Trade to “Legitimate” Commerce: The Commercial Transition in Nineteenth-Century West Africa. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. Pp. 144–171; Watkins, C. 2011. Dendezeiro: African oil palm agroecologies in Bahia, Brazil, and implications for development. Journal of Latin American Geography 10: 9–33.
19. McNeill, W. H. 1999. How the potato changed the world’s history. Social Research 66: 67–83; Fitzgerald, P., Lambkin, B. 2008. Migration in Irish History, 1607–2007. London: Palgrave MacMillan.
20. Morrison, K. D., Hauser, M. W. 2015. Risky business: Rice and inter-colonial dependencies in the Indian and Atlantic Oceans. Atlantic Studies 12: 371–392.
21. Moberg, M., Striffler, S. (eds.). 2003. Banana Wars: Power, Production, and History in the Ameri
cas. Durham: Duke University Press; Chapman, P. 2007. Bananas: How the United Fruit Company Shaped the World. Edinburgh: Canongate.
22. Anderson, J. L. 2004. Nature’s currency: The Atlantic mahogany trade and the commodification of nature in the eighteenth century. Early American Studies 2: 47–80; Bankoff, G. 2013. Deep forestry: Shapers of the Philippine forests. Environmental History 18: 523–556; Pearson, M., Lennon, J. 2010. Pastoral Australia: Fortunes, Failures and Hard Yakka: A Historical Overview. Victoria, Australia: CSIRO; Frost, W. 1997. Farmers, government, and the environment: The settlement of Australia’s “Wet Frontier,” 1870–1920. Australian Economic History Review 37: 19–38; Ferrier, Å. 2015. Journeys into the Rainforest: Archaeology of Culture Change and Continuity on the Evelyn Tableland, North Queensland. Canberra: Australian National University.
23. Brown, L. 2010. Monuments to freedom, monuments to nation: The politics of emancipation and remembrance in the eastern Caribbean. Slavery & Abolition 23: 93–116; Cushman, G. T. 2013. Guano and the Opening of the Pacific World: A Global Ecological History. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press; Allen, R. B. 2014. Slaves, convicts, abolitionism, and the global origins of the post-emancipation indentured labor system. Slavery & Abolition 35: 328–348; Bass, D. 2013. Everyday Ethnicity in Sri Lanka: Up-country Tamil Identity Politics. London: Routledge; Firth, S. 1976. The transformation of the labour trade in German New Guinea, 1899–1914. Journal of Pacific History 11: 51–65; Ramasamy, P. 1992. Labour control and labour resistance in the plantations of colonial Malaya. Journal of Peasant Studies 19: 87–105; Holloway, T. H. 2004. Immigrants on the Land: Coffee and Society in São Paulo, 1886–1934. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press; Scharlin, C., Villanueva, L. V. 2000. Philip Vera Cruz: A Personal History of Filipino Immigrants and the Farmworkers Movement (3rd edition). Seattle: University of Washington Press; Reyes, M. 2008. Migration and Filipino Children Left Behind: A Literature Review. Quezon City: Miriam College/UNICEF. Retrieved from www.unicef.org/philippines/Synthesis_StudyJuly12008.pdf.