Re: The lowly sweet potato may unlock America's past, How the root vegetable found it's way across the Pacific
- From: "benlizro@xxxxxxxxxx" <benlizro@xxxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Thu, 27 Mar 2008 14:36:38 -0700 (PDT)
On Mar 28, 9:50 am, Jack Linthicum <jacklinthi...@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
wrote:
On Mar 27, 4:36 pm, "benli...@xxxxxxxxxx" <benli...@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
On Mar 28, 8:53 am, Jack Linthicum <jacklinthi...@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
wrote:
On Mar 27, 2:36 pm, "benli...@xxxxxxxxxx" <benli...@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
On Mar 28, 12:13 am, Jack Linthicum <jacklinthi...@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
wrote:
On Mar 27, 6:54 am, "benli...@xxxxxxxxxx" <benli...@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
On Mar 27, 11:31 pm, Jack Linthicum <jacklinthi...@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
wrote:
On Mar 26, 10:16 pm, "benli...@xxxxxxxxxx" <benli...@xxxxxxxxxx>
wrote:
On Mar 27, 12:37 pm, Jack Linthicum <jacklinthi...@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
wrote:
On Mar 26, 7:15 pm, George <gbl...@xxxxxxxx> wrote:
One of the first things you need to be able to work metal is metal.
How about a controlled heat, a method of identifying ores and
extracting the metal
Stone hammers and stone anvils will work metal
IIRC the Pacific islands have very little in removable situations.
Deep in the interior of New Guinea is a rich copper and gold deposit,
but there is little on even the volcanic islands and none on the coral
atolls.
New Guinea was the end of the Pacific Pottery horizon.
New Zealand has clays and identifiable metal deposits that were only
accessed when the European arrived
So in your opinion the Polynesians wouldn't bother to trade for
pottery and metal tools with the South Americans ?
Not how ceramics and metal were sought after when the Europeans
arrived with such treasures?
What do you heat with? The Rapa Nui people used up all their trees and
couldn't make boats.
?? What is the relevance of this to the question of trading metal or
ceramic artefacts?
In the book The Blue of Capricorn the Westerner sees his female
companion as a an anti-innovator. He notices here arranging shells in
a pattern asks here to do a different one and she refuses. The life is
in a pattern, something that has been lost by the contact with the
outside. I would guess that there is almost no innovation after the
various groups reached into the Pacific.
"The Black and the White is arguably one of the most important
fictional stories of the Pacific: A French man who escaped the
wretchedness of his nation to discover that his adopted culture was
heartbreakingly shallow. It is one of those few stories that will
leave you thinking, and you may very well read again and again."
I would suggest looking at some archaeology and ethnography rather
than "guessing" on the basis of light fiction or jacket blurbs.
Ross Clark
Did you miss the author? Eugene Bur***? He died at age 46 so the
public knows little about him. Teamed with William Lederer on several
books.
On The Blue of Capricorn
A rare valuable and accurate view of the Pacific, March 8, 2002
This book has many factual chapters about the Pacific Region, and five
tales that are representative of some elements of the area. The Black
and the White is arguably one of the most important fictional stories
of the Pacific: A French man who escaped the wretchedness of his
nation to discover that his adopted culture was heartbreakingly
shallow. It is one of those few stories that will leave you thinking,
and you may very well read again and again. It was a great loss when
Bur*** died at a relatively young age.
Terrific overview of Pacific cultures and Geography, April 4, 1999
A great example of a excellent book that could become a classic
without being confused with world literature. A strait forward
discription of the South Seas and their peoples and geography(how
coral attols and volcanic islands are formed) without being dry, but
rather using it to help the reader better understand the stories he
has to tell. Anyone who loves the South Seas and the stories of Jack
London and Somerset Maugham will love this book. It is the #1 book I
have everyone read that comes to visit me. I always receive five
thumbs up.
I'm trying to decide whether you're joking or not. The guy co-authored
a couple of best-sellers in the 50s. He served in the Pacific during
WWII. Apparently he also had a PhD in Political Science. This still
does not add up to someone whose opinion I would attach a lot of
weight to on the subject of whether Pacific cultures were innovative
or stuck in some stagnant time warp. (One has heard similar stories
about the Japanese, Chinese, and other people, after all.)
And frankly the two wide-eyed blurbs from amazon.com readers do
nothing to help your case.
Ross Clark
Psychology PhD. From Oxford.
OK, but taught PolSci at Berkeley.
Name another published work that you
would find more acceptable.
A work of non-fiction, by someone who had actually studied the culture
history of the Pacific.
Ross Clark
That sounds like Blue of Capricorn. You have never read it, have you?
Did I say I had?
When you first mentioned the book, you referred to a character called
"the Westerner" (rather than "the author" or "Bur***") having certain
opinions about "his female companion", presumably to be taken as
typical of Polynesians. This was followed by a paragraph in praise of
"The Black and the White", a piece of fiction which, it now appears,
is part of the same book. The second blurber compared Bur***'s work
to the stories of Jack London and Somerset Maugham. One could be
forgiven for thinking you were bringing forward a collection of short
stories in evidence. On re-reading, it seems the book has "many
factual chapters". So is "the Westerner" in one of those, or in one of
the stories? And what was the extent of Bur***'s study of Pacific
ethnography and archaeology?
And then on the basis of Bur***'s bit of instant psychology of his
"female companion", you go on to guess that there was "almost no
innovation" after people reached the Pacific. Yet even a glance at the
ethnography would show you that the people in question had hundreds of
quite diverse cultures and languages. And no, they did not bring this
diversity with them from elsewhere. They developed it in situ, by
innovation. This is why I wonder why we should take Bur*** (or you)
seriously.
Ross Clark
If you want to surmise, surmise. If you want to learn, learn.
Actually, in my indirect way, I was inviting you to learn. But you
don't seem interested. I challenged your extrapolation from Bur*** on
the basis of things I know about. You have not responded.
Read the
book. The "Westerner" was how I remembered the French character in"The
Black and the White". Remember Bur*** spent WWII in the Pacific, some
of his time perhaps wasn't spent playing staff officer. The fact that
he was able to make observations of the life in the Pacific before the
culture collapsed under the weight of Western culture should be of
some note.
The fact that you place this cultural collapse post-WWII should be of
some note. You could learn a lot even if you only read people who
observed and published before Bur*** got there.
His advanced education came after WWII.
If you wish to learn the bits of Bur*** that have survived on the
Internet:
http://www.kaneprod.com/Classof61/Eugene%20Leonard%20Bur***.doc.http://content.cdlib.org/xtf/view?docId=hb629006vt&doc.view=frames&ch...
He was considered a brilliant scholar by his contemporaries, a gifted
examiner of Pacific culture by those that still use his work, and a
great loss to scholarship.
I have no doubt the book sold well. In fact I find that I have a copy
on my shelves, picked up some years ago but never read. But as far as
I can see Bur***'s scholarly output did not include anything on
Pacific cultures.
Ross Clark
.
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