서브메뉴
검색
상세정보
Before There Were Roses: Environmental Conflict and the Double Conquest of the Ecuadorian Andes.- [electronic resources]
Before There Were Roses: Environmental Conflict and the Double Conquest of the Ecuadorian Andes.- [electronic resources]
상세정보
- 자료유형
- 학위논문(국외)
- 자관 청구기호
- 기본표목-개인명
- 표제와 책임표시사항
- Before There Were Roses: Environmental Conflict and the Double Conquest of the Ecuadorian Andes. - [electronic resources]
- 발행, 배포, 간사 사항
- 발행, 배포, 간사 사항
- 형태사항
- 232 p.
- 일반주기
- Source: Dissertations Abstracts International, Volume: 86-11, Section: B.
- 일반주기
- Advisor: La Serna, Miguel.
- 학위논문주기
- Thesis (Ph.D.)--The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, 2025.
- 요약 등 주기
- 요약This dissertation, "Before There Were Roses: Environmental Conflict and the Double Conquest of the Ecuadorian Andes," explores the historical relationships between environmental change and evolving systems of labor at one of the oldest plantations in the Americas, a sixteenth-century hacienda in the Ecuadorian Andes known as Guachala. Focusing on the pre-Columbian and early Spanish colonial periods, the study combines archival research with archaeological and environmental studies as well as digital-mapping methods to analyze four systems of environmental control at Guachala. By showing how the back-to-back Incan and Spanish conquests disrupted poorly understood networks of kinship, exchange, and environmental reciprocity between the Kayambi and Karanki people of the northern Andes and the neighboring Quijos people of the upper Amazonian piedmont, I argue that colonization fueled experimentation with new forms of labor and triggered long-term processes of environmental change that challenge contemporary views of the Amazon as having played a minor role in this history. Finally, by examining the transition from Amazonian cotton to European wool in the late sixteenth century, this dissertation contributes new material and revises the terms of debate in environmental history regarding the immediate impacts and long-term consequences of Old-World ungulates in the Andes.
- 주제명부출표목-일반주제명
- 주제명부출표목-일반주제명
- 주제명부출표목-일반주제명
- 비통제 색인어
- 비통제 색인어
- 비통제 색인어
- 비통제 색인어
- 비통제 색인어
- 비통제 색인어
- 부출표목-단체명
- 기본자료저록
- Dissertations Abstracts International. 86-11B.
- 전자적 위치 및 접속
- 원문정보보기
MARC
008260219s2025 us s 000c||eng d■001000017357093
■00520260202103130
■006m o d
■007cr#unu||||||||
■020 ▼a9798315714088
■035 ▼a(MiAaPQ)AAI31939438
■040 ▼aMiAaPQ▼cMiAaPQ
■0820 ▼a980
■090 ▼a전자자료
■1001 ▼aGill, Nathan.
■24510▼aBefore There Were Roses: Environmental Conflict and the Double Conquest of the Ecuadorian Andes.▼h[electronic resources]
■260 ▼a[S.l.]▼bThe University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. ▼c2025
■260 1▼aAnn Arbor▼bProQuest Dissertations & Theses▼c2025
■300 ▼a232 p.
■500 ▼aSource: Dissertations Abstracts International, Volume: 86-11, Section: B.
■500 ▼aAdvisor: La Serna, Miguel.
■5021 ▼aThesis (Ph.D.)--The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, 2025.
■520 ▼aThis dissertation, "Before There Were Roses: Environmental Conflict and the Double Conquest of the Ecuadorian Andes," explores the historical relationships between environmental change and evolving systems of labor at one of the oldest plantations in the Americas, a sixteenth-century hacienda in the Ecuadorian Andes known as Guachala. Focusing on the pre-Columbian and early Spanish colonial periods, the study combines archival research with archaeological and environmental studies as well as digital-mapping methods to analyze four systems of environmental control at Guachala. By showing how the back-to-back Incan and Spanish conquests disrupted poorly understood networks of kinship, exchange, and environmental reciprocity between the Kayambi and Karanki people of the northern Andes and the neighboring Quijos people of the upper Amazonian piedmont, I argue that colonization fueled experimentation with new forms of labor and triggered long-term processes of environmental change that challenge contemporary views of the Amazon as having played a minor role in this history. Finally, by examining the transition from Amazonian cotton to European wool in the late sixteenth century, this dissertation contributes new material and revises the terms of debate in environmental history regarding the immediate impacts and long-term consequences of Old-World ungulates in the Andes.
■590 ▼aSchool code: 0153.
■650 4▼aLatin American history.
■650 4▼aEnvironmental studies.
■650 4▼aNative studies.
■653 ▼aAmazon
■653 ▼aAndes
■653 ▼aColonization
■653 ▼aEcuador
■653 ▼aEnvironmental history
■653 ▼aLabor
■690 ▼a0336
■690 ▼a0477
■690 ▼a0741
■71020▼aThe University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill▼bHistory.
■7730 ▼tDissertations Abstracts International▼g86-11B.
■790 ▼a0153
■791 ▼aPh.D.
■792 ▼a2025
■793 ▼aEnglish
■85640▼uhttp://www.riss.kr/pdu/ddodLink.do?id=T17357093▼nKERIS▼z이 자료의 원문은 한국교육학술정보원에서 제공합니다.


