Archival records held at the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew offer valuable sources to explore the history of colonial forestry in nineteenth-century Jamaica.
Against this backdrop of Empire Forestry and increasing concern about the impact of deforestation on the island, one tree began its journey towards bearing the national fruit of Jamaica. A monument to the people enslaved on the grounds of the University of the West Indies campus in Kingston, Jamaica, acknowledges that groves of ackee trees act as ‘botanical markers’ of former slave villages.
This use of the ackee tree as a long-term memorial of enslavement demonstrates the role of trees as sites of cultural memory and how ackee became the principal botanical symbol of Jamaican identity. However, there is scarcely any discussion of ackee in Kew’s archives, an absence which is connected to the tree’s long association with resistance to colonial exploitation.
Drawing on representations of ackee in art and literature to fill these archival absences, this talk will uncover the cultural history of a tree bearing a potentially poisonous fruit, growing beyond the colonial spaces of the plantation and botanic garden.
Forestami, reflecting on the ongoing urban forestry activities in the Metropolitan Area of Milan. A review after four years of planning and planting, and monitoring.
In the presentation Maria will briefly introduce the project, started with the research in 2019, and with the first plantation activities in 2020, and then review the different lesson learnt, and challenges faced, between planning and planting, and monitoring, and disseminating the activities.
Heather Craddock recently received her PhD in English Literature from the University of Roehampton and the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew. Her project, ‘Kew’s Colonial Archive: A Plant Humanities Approach to the Caribbean Miscellaneous Reports, 1850-1928’, examined Kew’s colonial heritage and the histories of botanic gardens, forests, and plantations in Jamaica. She co-curated an exhibition at Kew in 2023 about the history of forest conservation and deforestation, entitled ‘Uprooted’.
Maria Chiara Pastore (1980) is a Researcher in Urban Planning at Politecnico di Milano. Pastore’s research interests are mainly focused adaptive planning in relation to Urban Forestry, urban biodiversity. She is scientific director of The Project Forestami and PI of the Italian Project called “Biodiversity”, a national project funded by the Italian Ministry of Research, specifically on Urban Biodiversity.
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