HomeTrembling Earth: A Cultural History Of The Okefenokee Swamp
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Trembling Earth: A Cultural History Of The Okefenokee Swamp

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About this book

This innovative history of the Okefenokee Swamp reveals it as a place where harsh realities clashed with optimism shaping the borderland culture of southern Georgia and northern Florida for over two hundred years. From the formation of the Georgia colony in 1732 to the end of the Great Depression the Okefenokee Swamp was a site of conflict between divergent local communities. Coining the term ?ecolocalism to describe how local cultures form out of ecosystems and in relation to other communities Megan Kate Nelson offers a new view of the Okefenokee its inhabitants and its rich and telling record of thwarted ambitions unintended consequences and unresolved questions. The Okefenokee is simultaneously terrestrial and aquatic beautiful and terrifying fertile and barren. This peculiar ecology created discord as human groups attempted to overlay firm lines of race gender and class on an area of inherent ambiguity and blurred margins. Rice planters slaves fugitive slaves Seminoles surveyors timber barons Swampers and scientists came to the swamp with dreams of wealth freedom and status that conflicted in varied and complex ways. Ecolocalism emerged out of these conflicts between communities within the Okefenokee and other borderland swamps. Nelson narrates the fluctuations disconnections and confrontations embedded in the muck of the swamp and the mire of its disorderly history and she reminds us that it is out of such places of intermingling and uncertainty that cultures are forged.