Bushmen, botany and baking bread : Mary Pocock's record of a journey with Dorothea Bleek across Angola in 1925 / compiled and edited by Tony Dold and Jean Kelly.
The diaries: 1. Rondebosch, Cape to Ninda -- 2. Angola, Ninda to Kutsi -- 3. Kutsi Camp to Kunzumbia Camp -- 4. Kunzumbia to Cwelei Mission Station -- 5. Cwelei Mission Station to Cape Town. Appendices: 1. Newspaper Articles -- 2. Career of Mary Agard Pocock - Synopsis -- 3. Award of Honorary Doctorate -- 4. Obituary -- 5 Vernacular Plant Names and Ethnobotany -- 6. Glossary.
Summary:
[The book] presents the record of a remarkable overland journey documented by the botanist Mary Agard Pocock and illustrated with her photographs, sketches and paintings of southern Angola, its people and its plants. The purpose of the six-month-long expedition, by boat, on foot and by machila, was primarily for the renowned ethnologist Dorothea Bleek to collect ethnographic information of the last remaining Bushmen of the region. Besides her role as aide-de-camp, Mary Pocock's intention was to study the flora. She collected almost 1000 plant specimens from this virtually unexplored region, several of which proved to be new to science. A talented artist and photographer, Pocock also described, painted and photographed Bushmen in the villages. These are unque and rare representations of daily activities such as spinning cotton, preparing food, forging metal, playing musical instruments and dancing. Her meticulous daily travel account, glass plate slides, negatives, sketches and paintings have now been rescued from oblivion and collated, edited and presented here by Tony Dold and Jean Kelly for the first time.
This resource is supported by the Institute of Museum and Library Services under the provisions of the Library Services and Technology Act as administered by State Library of Iowa.