Books by Marcy Norton
“One of the things that she fixes on is that in Western Europe there was a distinction between wild and domesticated animals. That simply didn’t exist in the regions of the Americas that she is studying. What did exist was the difference between the predatory and the familiar. The basic misunderstanding was that for the indigenous Americans, if you feed an animal, it’s horrific to then kill it and eat it. It’s the worst thing you could do. Whereas for the Europeans, that’s what domestication is about. You feed animals, then you kill them and eat them…The other division she points out was that for the indigenous Americans at the time, the dividing line between the human and the non-human didn’t exist in the way that we think of it…So some people thought they were descended from plants. Others thought that they would become plants, or that they were descended from birds, or that they would become birds.” Read more...
The 2024 British Academy Book Prize for Global Cultural Understanding
Charles Tripp, Political Scientist
Interviews where books by Marcy Norton were recommended
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1
Material World: The Six Raw Materials That Shape Modern Civilization
by Ed Conway -
2
Smoke and Ashes: Opium's Hidden Histories
by Amitav Ghosh -
3
The Secret Lives of Numbers: A Global History of Mathematics & its Unsung Trailblazers
by Kate Kitagawa & Timothy Revell -
4
Divided: Racism, Medicine and Why We Need to Decolonise Healthcare
by Annabel Sowemimo -
5
Language City: The Fight to Preserve Endangered Mother Tongues
by Ross Perlin -
6
The Tame and the Wild: People and Animals after 1492
by Marcy Norton
The 2024 British Academy Book Prize for Global Cultural Understanding, recommended by Charles Tripp
The 2024 British Academy Book Prize for Global Cultural Understanding, recommended by Charles Tripp
The British Academy Book Prize is awarded annually for a nonfiction book that combines rigorous research with engaging writing—and promotes global cultural understanding. Charles Tripp, chair of this year’s judging panel, explains what that means and introduces the six books that made the 2024 shortlist.