Ulteriori informazioni
This book traces the material-cultural dynamics of the honeybee and beekeeping from prehistory to the present in the areas that would become Imperial Russia and the Soviet Union. Beekeeping and the cultural meanings around the honeybee and its products have been fundamental to this region's history.
Sommario
Acknowledgments
Introduction
Prologue: Land, People, and the Honeybee in Prehistory
Part I: Premodern Bee-Centered Landscapes
Chapter 1: Political Economies of Wax and Honey in the Rise of Rus and Muscovy from the 8th to the 15th Centuries
Chapter 2: The Honeybee and Religiosity: The Hum of Human-Bee Interaction in Prehistory, Kievan Rus, and Muscovy
Part II: Transitions: Early Modern Muscovy and Imperial Russia
Chapter 3: Beekeeping and Early Modern Empire, 1550-1800
Chapter 4: An Imperial Russian Bee Culture, 1550-1820
Part III: Modern Imperial Russia, the Soviet Union, and Post-Soviet Russia
Chapter 5: Beekeeping and Bee Culture in the Late Empire to the Great War
Chapter 6: The Sovietization of Beekeeping: "The Most Powerful in the World"
Chapter 7: Aftermath: Bee Culture in Contemporary Public History
Conclusion
Bibliography
About the Author
Info autore
Catherine B. Clay is professor emerita at Shippenburg University.
Riassunto
This book traces the material–cultural dynamics of the honeybee and beekeeping from prehistory to the present in the areas that would become Imperial Russia and the Soviet Union. Beekeeping and the cultural meanings around the honeybee and its products have been fundamental to this region’s history.