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Initiatives

Corn and Indigenous Communities in the Americas

Tuesday, March 27th, 2012
Jolene Rickard
Jane Mt. Pleasant
Stephen Brush
Elizabeth Fitting
Scott Manning Stevens
9:30am - 4:30pm

Center for Advanced Study

912 W. Illinois St

Urbana

Event Description

More than seven thousand years ago, indigenous peoples in Mexico domesticated maize (corn), the most important agribusiness plant of the twenty-first century. For the past four millennia corn has been a vital crop, inspiration for ritual calendars and cosmovisions, fiber for communal cohesion and vital commodity for barter and trade among indigenous communities, tribes, kingdoms and empires from the Andes to the plains of North America. Cycles of invasion and globalization have challenged the ways Indians of the Americas have used corn as food and as symbol. This workshop explores recent challenges for indigenous farming communities raised by the viral spread of GMO cultivation, NAFTA, and the growth of agribusiness. Presentations and discussions will deal with productivity and global price pressures as much as with issues of essentializing and romantizing indigenous identities so often linked to corn.

PANELS:
9:45am, Indigenous Corn Farmers from Domesticators of Cultivars to Competitors with Globalized Agribusiness
1:30pm, Corn as a Dimension in the Construction of Indigineity  
For more information, contact Nils Jacobsen, CAS Resident Associate
Jolene Rickard

History of Art; and Art, Visual Studies Program Cornell University

Jane Mt. Pleasant

Horticulture and American Indian Program Cornell University

Stephen Brush

Human & Community Development and Anthropology (emeritus) University of California, Davis

Elizabeth Fitting

Sociology & Social Anthropology, Dalhousie University

Scott Manning Stevens

Director, D'Arcy McNickle Center for American Indian and Indigenous Studies, Newberry Library