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...