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Steeped in Heritage Sarah Fleming Ives

Steeped in Heritage By Sarah Fleming Ives

Steeped in Heritage by Sarah Fleming Ives


Summary

Exploring the racial and environmental politics behind South Africa's rooibos tea industry to examine heritage-based claims to the indigenous plant by two groups of contested indigeneity: white Afrikaners and coloured South Africans.

Steeped in Heritage Summary

Steeped in Heritage: The Racial Politics of South African Rooibos Tea by Sarah Fleming Ives

South African rooibos tea is a commodity of contrasts. Renowned for its healing properties, the rooibos plant grows in a region defined by the violence of poverty, dispossession, and racism. And while rooibos is hailed as an ecologically indigenous commodity, it is farmed by people who struggle to express authentic belonging to the land: Afrikaners, who espouse a white African indigeneity, and coloureds, who are characterized either as the mixed-race progeny of extinct Bushmen or as possessing a false identity, indigenous to nowhere. In Steeped in Heritage Sarah Ives explores how these groups advance alternate claims of indigeneity based on the cultural ownership of an indigenous plant. This heritage-based struggle over rooibos shows how communities negotiate landscapes marked by racial dispossession within an ecosystem imperiled by climate change and precarious social relations in the postapartheid era.

Steeped in Heritage Reviews

Ives provides an accessible and interesting perspective on the complex, ongoing issue of race relations within South Africa. Recommended. -- C. W. Herrick * Choice *
Steeped in Heritage is an excellent and highly recommendable account. Offers wonderful scope for comparison. -- Annika Teppo * Anthropological Forum *
Steeped in Heritage is likely to be of interest to any scholar interested in anthro-ecological interactions, racial politics, questions of self-hood and belonging, or simply interested in finding meaning in the tealeaves left at the bottom of their cup. -- Sarah Bradley * Journal of Ecological Anthropology *
A nuanced and theoretically engaged analysis. Steeped in Heritage offers a novel contribution to a long tradition of deeply ethnographic political ecology scholarship. This book will interest scholars working on a vast range of issues including indigeneity, environmental change, climate change, agricultural labor, identity politics, multispecies relationships, place-based products, and African studies. -- Emma McDonell * Journal of Political Ecology *

Compelling and prescient . . . Steeped in Heritage is a fascinating exploration of the dynamics surrounding identity and its ties to things and places in a racist, capitalist context.

-- Aran Mackinnon * African Quarterly *
Steeped in Heritage is thorough and well-thought-out . . . Excellent and highly recommendable. -- Annika Teppo * Anthropological Forum *
Steeped in Heritage is a fascinating and well-written account that refreshingly avoids the dominant paradigms associated with climate change. . . . Instead, it gives us a much-needed analysis of ecological change as a thoroughly social process, inseparable from local politics, which are dominated by structures of race and class. It is essential reading for anyone interested in the contemporary politics of southern Africa or the future of food in a time of ecological crisis. -- Elizabeth Hull * American Anthropologist *
A nuanced, elegantly written study of what it means to own and profit off a crop and the land that sustains it. Ives writes in a lyrical fashion, using the metaphors of cultivation, steeping and sipping to create an interpretive framework. . . . In this vital study of plants and people, commodities and labourers, Ives centres her discussion on the supply side to show where the tea we drink is made. -- Abena Dove Osseo-Asare * Journal of Modern African Studies *
Steeped in Heritage provides a fresh perspective on the post-apartheid situation of race relations and identity in South Africa while offering insight into the precarious rooibos economy of the Western Cape region. This book is multidisciplinary and will especially benefit those interested in South African studies, food economies, and cultural and regional identities that derive from commodity production. -- Gina Covert Benavidez * Journal of Global South Studies *

About Sarah Fleming Ives

Sarah Ives is a lecturer and postdoctoral fellow in the Program in Writing and Rhetoric at Stanford University.

Table of Contents

Preface ix
Acknowledgments xiii
Introduction. The Rooibos Revolution 1
1. Cultivating Indigeneity 29
2. Farming the Bush 65
3. Endemic Plants and Invasive People 96
4. Rumor, Conspiracy, and the Politics of Narration 134
5. Precarious Landscapes 173
Conclusion. Although There Is No Place Called Rooibos 210
Notes 217
References 229
Index 245

Additional information

GOR013342385
9780822369936
0822369931
Steeped in Heritage: The Racial Politics of South African Rooibos Tea by Sarah Fleming Ives
Used - Very Good
Paperback
Duke University Press
2017-10-27
272
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
This is a used book - there is no escaping the fact it has been read by someone else and it will show signs of wear and previous use. Overall we expect it to be in very good condition, but if you are not entirely satisfied please get in touch with us

Customer Reviews - Steeped in Heritage