Africulture : How the Principles, Practices, Plants, and People of African Descent Have Shaped American Agriculture
Africulture : How the Principles, Practices, Plants, and People of African Descent Have Shaped American Agriculture
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Author(s): Carter, Michael, Jr.
ISBN No.: 9781645023012
Pages: 336
Year: 202605
Format: Trade Cloth (Hard Cover)
Price: $ 41.93
Dispatch delay: Dispatched between 7 to 15 days
Status: Available (Forthcoming)

"In Africulture , fifth-generation Black farmer Michael Carter Jr. presents an uplifting and enlightening celebration of Black people and African crop varieties and agricultural practices that were, and are, critically important to the success of American agriculture. He educates using personal memories, cultural history, and stories of his success with African varieties like jute and Nigerian spinach. "Throughout the book, Carter draws on the metaphors of a plant and a seed to discuss not only plant health and bounty, but also the larger issues for African Americans working to succeed in farming. Africulture points the way to using organic and sustainable practices, cooperative marketing, and community education to grow a new generation of increasingly more successful Black farmers and agriculturalists." --Ira Wallace, Southern Exposure Seed Exchange; author of The Timber Press Guide to Vegetable Gardening in the Southeast "The ancestors are undoubtedly shaking their tambourines in celebration of Africulture , Brother Carter's reverent recounting of the noble, dignified, and expert contribution of Black people to American agriculture in the face of extinction-level threats. Carter elucidates the poetic kinship between the Black agrarian narrative and the botanical life cycle of the very plants we tend, interweaving his vulnerable personal memoir as a fifth-generation farmer. Africulture provides a blueprint for the blossoming of an agriculture rooted in cultural memory, ecological care, and mutual thriving.


" --Leah Penniman, cofounder, Soul Fire Farm; author of Farming While Black "As a fellow Virginian, I am honored to offer praise for Michael Carter Jr.'s Africulture . Mr. Carter reminds those of us who need reminding that without African farming experience, white immigrants like me would not have survived long in the American colonies. He does this in a lively, engaging style, including metaphors of Black history as stages of plant growth. I appreciate his descriptions of tasty African crops that we could grow in Virginia for climate change resilience. With inspiring bios of prominent Black farmers and educators, Africulture provides an uplifting message and encouragement to other farmers, especially Black farmers." --Pam Dawling, author of Sustainable Market Farming, Second Edition and The Year-Round Hoophouse.



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