A Companion to American Agricultural History. Группа авторов
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СКАЧАТЬ government policy that provides nutritional programs for school children and the disadvantaged contending with food insecurity. It is the story of inequitable federal production and income programs and well-intentioned and often successful conservation and environmental programs that benefit urban and rural America. The history of American agriculture is complex with many parts, the synthesis of which enables us to better understand the American experience.

      The contributors to this book constitute a gathering of emerging and established scholars who have written accessible and astute chapters on a multiplicity of topics to provide readers with an introduction to their subject. Each chapter offers readers a place to begin their own pursuit of American agricultural history, whether in general or regarding the subject under consideration. The following collection of thirty-one original chapters and an extensive bibliography will enable readers to gain an understanding of American agricultural history across region and time as well as focus on specific subjects, themes, and issues. In the past, many scholars who have written about the topics in this collection analyzed political, social, and economic events to give their histories substance, form, and meaning. In the twenty-first century these subjects often are understood through new interdisciplinary lenses of race, class, and gender as well as the environment that give greater breadth and depth to our understanding of America’s agricultural past.

      These chapters are informative, challenging, and interpretive. Several touch on similar subjects but provide different points of view. Others offer analysis of newly developing areas for research, such as the arts, urban and organic farming, and the environment. Still others assess the gendered nature of American agriculture, as well as matters of race, ethnicity, and power, and still others delve into the world of agribusiness from the meatpacking plants to migrant labor to the marketing of new products, including foods, at home and abroad. Others trace the origin and development of agricultural politics and policies, while others describe changes in science, technology, and government regulations.

      We hope that this book will provide a succinct and solid foundation for understanding American agricultural history and offer new insights and fresh, innovative directions and ideas for further research. It is, of course, a superb reference volume for the topics discussed. Moreover, this collection provides an assessment of nearly a century of scholarship written by historians, political scientists, economists, geographers, anthropologists, sociologists, and environmentalists, among others, to constitute a book of chapters that is foundational to the study of American agricultural history.

      It has been my privilege to have been invited to organize this collection of chapters and to work with these talented scholars from many disciplines to provide a usable book on the history of American agriculture. Although I would have liked to include additional subjects, any substantive omissions only prove that the field is complex, wide-ranging, and ever expansive. New topics for research and writing are limited only by the imagination, skill, and knowledge of anyone interested in America’s agricultural past. I am confident that these chapters will provide a usable, accessible, and suggestive reference for anyone desiring to learn about American agricultural history. More importantly, I hope this book will enable all readers to understand the integral importance of our agricultural past to the American experience.

Part I REGIONAL

       Gayle Fritz

      The history of food production in North America before European contact is deep and diverse, with traditions that vary geographically and culturally. Archaeologists, historians, geographers, botanists, and agronomists have studied pre-Columbian agriculture for more than a century, and it remains a widely discussed topic in textbooks and scholarly publications. Members of the general public are also intrigued by information about past Native American farming. These studies, after all, reveal where some of our foods came from and how people grew crops in challenging environments without metal tools or modern mechanical devices. The past might even hold clues to help us cope with issues such as climate change and to explore alternative methods to the low-diversity, high-energy input systems practiced by most American farmers today.

      Northwest Coast and Interior Plateau societies, long classified as non-agricultural fisher-hunter-gatherers, are now recognized for intricate landscape management practices, including cultivation, that increased the productivity of staple root crops, berries, and other plant foods (Peacock and Turner 2000; Deur and Turner 2005). It is difficult to date the antiquity of these strategies, but there is no doubt that they predate European influence. Combined archaeological and ethnobotanical studies that include authors who belong to Canadian First Nations and US Native American communities expand our knowledge about when and where early residents of the Pacific Northwest applied these methods and how their coastal gardens and upland garden-like meadows fit into long-term cultural trajectories in this densely populated region.

      I begin this chapter with a review of plant domestication in eastern North America’s Midwest riverine area, focusing first on the Eastern Agricultural Complex, and moving forward in time to maize-based agriculture. The next section is devoted to crops and farmers in the Southwest, where both regional diversity and changes through time are reflected in the archaeological record. In the following section, I cover the Pacific Northwest, summarizing evidence for landscape domestication that included СКАЧАТЬ