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Beyond the "Pristine Relic": How Social Power and History Shape African Sacred Groves

  Beyond the "Pristine Relic": How Social Power and History Shape African Sacred Groves ​For over a century, Western observers—from colonial administrators and functionalist anthropologists to modern deep-ecology conservationists—have looked at the patches of dense forest dotting the African continent and seen the same thing: "relics." In this narrative, these sacred groves are romanticized as untouched, pristine remnants of an ancient, primeval landscape, miraculously preserved by local religious taboos before human activity cleared the surrounding land. ​However, the pioneering work of anthropologist Michael J. Sheridan radically disrupts this romantic snapshot. Through his foundational text The Environmental and Social History of African Sacred Groves: A Tanzanian Case Study (2009) and his co-edited volume with Celia Nyamweru, African Sacred Groves: Ecological Dynamics and Social Change (2008), Sheridan redefines these spaces. They are not static natural mus...

Slow Scholarship in a Fast World: Napoleon Hill, Books, and Wikipedia

There are some interesting connections between Napoleon Hill's philosophy and the culture of Wikipedia,  even though Wikipedia itself is careful to avoid promoting any particular self-help philosophy. Slow Scholarship in a Fast World: Napoleon Hill, Books, and Wikipedia Napoleon Hill and Self-Education One of Hill's central assumptions was that individuals have the ability—and responsibility—to educate themselves. He encouraged readers to seek knowledge actively rather than waiting for institutions to provide it. Wikipedia embodies a similar principle. It is built on the idea that knowledge should be freely accessible and that ordinary people can participate in gathering, organizing, and sharing information. Millions of volunteers spend countless hours researching sources, improving articles, and making knowledge available to others. Hill often wrote about "specialized knowledge" as a key ingredient of achievement. Wikipedia can be viewed as a vast repository of speci...

Napoleon Hill, Self-Development, and the Age Before Television

Napoleon Hill, Self-Development, and the Age Before Television In discussions about personal development, few names are as well known as Napoleon Hill. Best known for his 1937 book Think and Grow Rich, Hill encouraged readers to develop a clear purpose, cultivate disciplined thinking, and persist in the pursuit of meaningful goals. While many of his historical claims have been debated, his core message continues to attract readers nearly a century later. One reason for this enduring interest may be that Hill's philosophy emerged in a world before television became a dominant cultural force. His ideas were developed during a period when books, newspapers, lectures, churches, civic organizations, and face-to-face conversations played a central role in shaping public thought. People certainly enjoyed entertainment, but they did not live in an environment of constant visual stimulation and continuous media consumption. Hill's teachings reflected this earlier world. He encouraged re...

Napoleon Hill in the Age Before Television: A Philosophy of Mental Sovereignty

  Napoleon Hill in the Age Before Television: A Philosophy of Mental Sovereignty More than eighty years after the publication of Think and Grow Rich, the teachings of Napoleon Hill continue to attract readers seeking direction, purpose, and self-development. While Hill's work has been criticized for some of its historical claims and assumptions about success, many people still find value in its central message: the importance of mastering one's thoughts and cultivating a definite purpose in life. One often overlooked aspect of Hill's philosophy is the era in which it emerged. Hill developed his ideas before television became a dominant force in society. When Think and Grow Rich was published in 1937, people lived in a vastly different media environment. Information came primarily from books, newspapers, magazines, public lectures, churches, schools, and civic organizations. While radio and motion pictures were popular, they did not provide the constant visual stimulation th...

Mark Twain's King Leopold's Soliloquy: Literature, Photography, and the Campaign Against Congo Atrocities

Mark Twain's King Leopold's Soliloquy: Literature, Photography, and the Campaign Against Congo Atrocities In 1905, American author Mark Twain published King Leopold's Soliloquy, one of the most powerful literary attacks ever written against colonial exploitation. Through satire, Twain exposed the contradictions between the public image of King Leopold II of Belgium and the realities of life in the Congo Free State, a vast territory in Central Africa that Leopold personally controlled from 1885 to 1908. At a time when many Europeans and Americans viewed colonialism as a civilizing mission, Twain challenged that narrative. Rather than writing a conventional history or political report, he used humor, irony, and sharp criticism to reveal the suffering that lay behind the Congo's lucrative rubber trade. The Congo Free State and the Rubber Boom The Congo Free State was not initially governed as a Belgian colony. Instead, it was the personal possession of King Leopold II. Leo...

Turning Sand into Soil: The Regenerative Cover Crops Reclaiming Senegal’s Terroir

​Turning Sand into Soil: The Regenerative Cover Crops Reclaiming Senegal’s Terroir ​ By:  LJ Dabo | Category: Ecology & Agroforestry | Read Time: 6 min ​Across Senegal, from the striking, reddish-beige Dior soils of the Peanut Basin to the delicate coastal sands of the Niayes horticultural belt, farmers face an ancient, intensifying adversary: sand. Inherently draining, lean, and exposed to the harsh, dust-laden Harmattan winds, sandy soil presents a profound ecological puzzle. Yet, a shift in narrative from scarcity to regenerative stewardship is proving that these living spaces can be transformed. ​Traditional agricultural systems often relied on heavy tilling and chemical interventions to force productivity out of sandy land. Today, insights from ecological restoration and Traditional Ecological Knowledge (TEK) point toward a far more elegant, passive solution: living covers . By selecting crops engineered by nature to survive arid environments, we can fundamentally...

Beyond the Flush: How to Keep Traditional Pit Latrines and Hole Toilets Clean and Odor-Free

  ​ Beyond the Flush: How to Keep Traditional Pit Latrines and Hole Toilets Clean and Odor-Free ​When traveling or working in rural regions across Africa, Asia, or deep backcountry areas, the toilet infrastructure often shifts from modern plumbing to traditional pit latrines—essential holes in the ground dug down to the water table or a deep containment zone. ​Without a mechanical water flush or a plumbing trap to isolate smells, these toilets rely entirely on basic biochemistry and smart physical habits to remain sanitary. If you are managing a rural site or preparing for a field expedition, here is the definitive guide to controlling odors and maintaining hygiene at the ground level. ​1. Managing the Pit: Neutralizing Odor at the Biological Source ​In a traditional hole toilet, smells happen when waste decomposes anaerobically (without enough oxygen), which releases pungent sulfur and ammonia gases. To stop the smell, you have to alter the environment inside the hole. ​The ...