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Wade Davis |
Death and Life in the Ethnosphere
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Topic Background |
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Of the estimated 6000 languages spoken around the world, over half are not being taught to children. For anthropologists, language loss of this kind is a prime indicator of cultures becoming moribund, and cultural diversity being in a precipitous decline. Culture has been defined as the ever-changing values, traditions, relationships, and worldview shared by a group of people bound together by a common history, geographic location, language, social class, and religion. Cultural diversity is represented by the variety of these groups of people in any given city and across the world. |
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Speaker Biography |
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| Wade Davis is an anthropologist, botanical explorer, and author who received his Ph.D. in ethnobotany from Harvard University. He spent more than three years in the Amazon and Andes as a plant explorer, living among 15 indigenous groups in eight Latin American nations while making some 6,000 botanical collections. Davis has worked as a guide, park ranger, and forestry engineer in Western Canada. He has conducted ethnographic fieldwork among several indigenous societies of northern Canada, in Haiti, Tibet, Venezuela and Northern Kenya. His books include Passage of Darkness (1988) and The Serpent and the Rainbow , Shadows in the Sun (1998) and Light at the Edge of the World (2001). A research associate of the Institute of Economic Botany of the New York Botanical Garden, Davis is also a board member of the David Suzuki Foundation, Ecotrust, Future Generations, and Cultural Survival—all nongovernmental organizations dedicated to conservation-based development and the protection of cultural and biological diversity. He is currently an explorer-in-residence at the National Geographic Society. For more information about Wade Davis visit www.wade-davis.com |
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