
Shows that a fraught historical process was at work in which Basotho drew on local and global sources of knowledge and how this small nation surrounded by South Africa can serve as a valuable case-study... Read More
This book is a consummate study of local agricultural knowledge and its co-evolution with colonial rule. And it breaks new ground. His intensive field interviews and archive-based evidence and stories show the intersection between local knowledge and colonial imposed policies in soil science and farm management. Lesotho is small, but it admirably illustrates a much larger issue for southern Africa and the world's rural histories. This study gives a voice to farmers who sought to sustain their views and practices in a rapidly changing world.- James McCann, Professor Emeritus of History and African Studies, Boston University, Author of Green Land, Brown Land, Black Land: An Environmental History of Africa
Poverty of Progress centers the moral vision of tsoelopele--or "progress"--which guided Sotho farmers as they navigated colonialism and economic dependence on South Africa. Focusing on innovators and their husbandry practices, Conz delivers a readable and astute history of farming as an intellectual project and political act.- Professor Nancy Jacobs, Department of History, Brown University
This book is a consummate study of local agricultural knowledge and its co-evolution with colonial rule. And it breaks new ground. His intensive field interviews and archive-based evidence and stories show the intersection between local knowledge and colonial imposed policies in soil science and farm management. Lesotho is small, but it admirably illustrates a much larger issue for southern Africa and the world's rural histories. This study gives a voice to farmers who sought to sustain their views and practices in a rapidly changing world.– James McCann, Professor Emeritus of History and African Studies, Boston University, Author of Green Land, Brown Land, Black Land: An Environmental History of Africa
Poverty of Progress centers the moral vision of tsoelopele--or "progress"--which guided Sotho farmers as they navigated colonialism and economic dependence on South Africa. Focusing on innovators and their husbandry practices, Conz delivers a readable and astute history of farming as an intellectual project and political act.– Professor Nancy Jacobs, Department of History, Brown University