"This remarkable work on the Serengeti area in Tanzania will be of great value to Africans and non-Africans alike, including researchers in African history, anthropology, and geography.... Highly recommended."
"Jan Bender Shetler has written an exceptionally erudite work that contributes in seminal ways to the fields of both African and environmental history and provides an innovative new model for analysing oral histories through an environmental lens... . Highly recommended!"
"Imagining Serengeti takes its place in a sophisticated literature on landscape and ecology in Africa....Shetler's contribution is a particularly distinguished one, not least for the array of approaches she has brought to her project....(T)his is a landmark volume, and it will be required reading in African and environmental history."
"Shetler's book provides a completely new analysis of the Serengeti debate by adding the voices of a forgotten population, the peoples of the western Serengeti.... The centrality of the landscape to Serengeti peoples' identitites, the complexity of local environmental knowledge, and the deep historical and emotional attachments to place are thus illustrated in vivid detail."
"Shetler provides a thorough critique of...colonial conservation policy, which, without reference to the region's ecological or social past, redefined the Serengeti as a wilderness, initiating a process of fortress conservation.... The book's pronounced spatial perspectives and ecological focus demonstrate how meaningful the history of a place is to the people whose ancestors claimed, measured and manipulated this region."
"This is an extraordinary book by an historian of uncommon erudition and originality.... For the reader whose primary interest in the Serengeti is its wildlife, the lesson that jumps off the pages is that, far from pristine wilderness, this is profoundly humanized territory, occupied and transformed through human labor and imagination for millennia."
"This work will come as a welcome reminder of what a fine harvest of historical data can be had from a careful culling of the oral histories of Africa's numerous decentralised societies.... Shetler...has offered both environmental and African oral historians a cornucopia."
"The Serengeti ecosystem is a symbol of global conservation efforts, but in conservationist literature the agricultural and agro-pastoral peoples who lived on the western reaches of the ecosystem became little more than 'poachers' who had no legitimate claim to the land or resources of the park. In this fascinating book on a topic of importance to specialists in several different fields, Jan Bender Shetler attempts to provide a corrective to this perception." -- Gregory H. Maddox