Interwoven Rosewood: Collaborative Ecologies, Colonial Entanglements, and Indigenous Resistance
Autor Julie Velásquez Runk, Wounaan National Congress, Wounaan Local Congress of Majéen Limba Engleză Paperback – 9 iun 2026
Drawing on more than a decade of community-based research and six collaborative book workshops, the authors weave together first-person narratives, ecological analysis, historical context, and Indigenous knowledge. The result is a richly textured account that challenges dominant narratives of environmental degradation by centering Wounaan experiences of joy, resistance, and conviviality. The book’s structure reflects its method: interwoven chapters authored or spoken by Wounaan colleagues, grounded in consent protocols and shaped by ancestral storytelling traditions.
Accessibly written, Interweaving Rosewood is ideal for courses in environmental conservation, Indigenous studies, anthropology, Latin American studies, and political ecology. With its interdisciplinary reach and classroom-ready discussion questions, the book invites readers to reflect on the global forces behind environmental catastrophe—and the enduring power of Indigenous ways of knowing, being, and becoming.
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780816546060
ISBN-10: 0816546061
Pagini: 510
Ilustrații: 48 b&w illustrations, 3 color illustrations, 5 tables
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 x 33 mm
Greutate: 0.79 kg
Editura: University of Arizona Press
Colecția University of Arizona Press
ISBN-10: 0816546061
Pagini: 510
Ilustrații: 48 b&w illustrations, 3 color illustrations, 5 tables
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 x 33 mm
Greutate: 0.79 kg
Editura: University of Arizona Press
Colecția University of Arizona Press
Notă biografică
Julie Velásquez Runk is director, professor, and Weigl Fellow in Environment and Sustainability Studies at Wake Forest University and a research associate at the Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute. She fosters transdisciplinary research in collaboration.
Recenzii
“Expansive in both space and time, this captivating book takes you into the ecologically and culturally rich forests of the Darien and halfway around the world. With short chapters authored by diverse voices, the book weaves together ecology, history, and anthropology to provide insights into the myriad forces that have shaped and continue to shape interactions between humans and nature at local to global scales.”—Liza Comita, Yale University
“Relatively few scholarly books transcend the usual barriers that divide and exclude academic disciplines, audiences, and public interests. This book does so beautifully by inviting readers of all kinds to glimpse the Wounaan people of Panama through uplifting first-person narratives and no-nonsense accounts of their historical struggles involving rosewood trees, especially cocobolo rosewood (Dalbergia retusa). Based in deep and long-term interdisciplinary research and communicated through diverse voices, it takes us on a journey from the demand of ‘cocobolo fever’ in East Asian markets to its supply through rampant logging of cocobolo rosewood in Wounaan lands, with all the disheartening and uplifting turns involving land rights, environmental degradation, and exploitation of natural resources.”—James R. Welch, author of Persistence of Good Living: A’uwẽ Life Cycles and Well-Being in the Central Brazilian Cerrados
“In the history of global capitalism, certain commodities take the center stage. Yet, as the rosewood fever shows, nonhumans are always more than their commodity form. In gathering global and Indigenous stories about life in the Panamanian forest and beyond, this book reminds us that histories of environmental depletion and care are inevitably open-ended.”—Piergiorgio Di Giminiani, author of Sentient Lands: Indigeneity, Property, and Political Imagination in Neoliberal Chile
“This is the rare book that puts knowledge co-production into practice. Using a contrapuntal style to unite indigenous and academic voices in a masterful rumination on plants and life, the book illuminates colonialism’s destructive force in the lives and lifeworlds of Panama’s Wounaan, while also showcasing their ongoing resistance to those forces. Ultimately, this multi-vocal, lyrical book is a hopeful and accessible resource for students and researchers seeking new perspectives on the world.”—Kendra McSweeney, The Ohio State University
“Relatively few scholarly books transcend the usual barriers that divide and exclude academic disciplines, audiences, and public interests. This book does so beautifully by inviting readers of all kinds to glimpse the Wounaan people of Panama through uplifting first-person narratives and no-nonsense accounts of their historical struggles involving rosewood trees, especially cocobolo rosewood (Dalbergia retusa). Based in deep and long-term interdisciplinary research and communicated through diverse voices, it takes us on a journey from the demand of ‘cocobolo fever’ in East Asian markets to its supply through rampant logging of cocobolo rosewood in Wounaan lands, with all the disheartening and uplifting turns involving land rights, environmental degradation, and exploitation of natural resources.”—James R. Welch, author of Persistence of Good Living: A’uwẽ Life Cycles and Well-Being in the Central Brazilian Cerrados
“In the history of global capitalism, certain commodities take the center stage. Yet, as the rosewood fever shows, nonhumans are always more than their commodity form. In gathering global and Indigenous stories about life in the Panamanian forest and beyond, this book reminds us that histories of environmental depletion and care are inevitably open-ended.”—Piergiorgio Di Giminiani, author of Sentient Lands: Indigeneity, Property, and Political Imagination in Neoliberal Chile
“This is the rare book that puts knowledge co-production into practice. Using a contrapuntal style to unite indigenous and academic voices in a masterful rumination on plants and life, the book illuminates colonialism’s destructive force in the lives and lifeworlds of Panama’s Wounaan, while also showcasing their ongoing resistance to those forces. Ultimately, this multi-vocal, lyrical book is a hopeful and accessible resource for students and researchers seeking new perspectives on the world.”—Kendra McSweeney, The Ohio State University
Descriere
Interweaving Rosewood is a collaborative, community-rooted exploration of the global rosewood trade and its entanglements with colonialism, environmental degradation, and Indigenous resistance. Co-authored with Wounaan authorities and community members, this book reveals how centuries of extractive capitalism have shaped Wounaan lands—and how beauty, joy, and relationality persist as powerful forms of resistance and renewal.