University Press of America
Pages: 100
Trim: 6¼ x 9½
978-0-7618-3652-0 • Hardback • November 2007 • $92.00 • (£71.00)
978-0-7618-3653-7 • Paperback • May 2007 • $44.99 • (£35.00)
Justin M. Nolan, Ph.D. is Research Assistant Professor of Anthropology at the University of Arkansas. He was the recipient of the Students' Choice Teaching Award from the University of Missouri in 2000 and presently holds a position on the Board of Trustees for the Society of Ethnobiology. Professor Nolan continues to pursue fieldwork in ethnobiology and regional folklore in the American South.
Part 1 Acknowledgements
Part 2 Preface
Chapter 3 Scope of the Study
Chapter 4 The Study Region and its People
Chapter 5 Research Methods
Chapter 6 The Ethnobotany of Little Dixie
Chapter 7 Ethnobotanical Knowledge Variation in Little Dixie
Chapter 8 The Ecology of Ethnobotanical Knowledge
Chapter 9 Ethnobotanical Classification among Experts and Novices
Chapter 10 Conclusion
Part 11 Bibliography
Part 12 Appendix
This short, compact study is a model of ethnobotanical research, and I highly recommend it for classroom use. Nolan hardly wastes a word. He states the theory, methodology, and major findings clearly and straightforwardly, and thus can get an astonishing amount of data into a hundred pages. The simple, accessible prose quickly gives way to highly sophisticated, mathematicized analysis.
— Journal Of Ethnobiology, Spring/Summer 2008
Ethnobotany, all too often, focuses on traditional, non-industrialized societies; this book draws our attention to natural resource knowledge in our own backyard. Nolan has produced a well-researched vision of ethnobotany of Little Dixie—famous for its antebellum plantation history—in the Missouri heartland, which simultaneously addresses global issues.
— Human Ecology, 15 July 2009
This work is valuable for ethnobotanists, folklorists, and anthropologists. . . . Recommended.
— Choice Reviews
A very nice little book….Nolan has produced a well researched vision of ethnobotany of Little Dixie-famous for its anti-bellum plantation history-in the Missouri heartland, which simultaneously addresses global issues.
— July 15, 2009; Human Ecology
This short, compact study is a model of ethnobotanical research, and I highly recommend it for classroom use. Nolan hardly wastes a word. He states the theory, methodology, and major findings clearly and straightforwardly and thus can get a large amount of data into a hundred pages.
— E.N. Anderson, University of California