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Vient de paraître : Sandip Hazareesingh & Harro Maat (Ed.), Local Subversions of Colonial Cultures. Commodities and Anti-Commodities in Global History, Palgrave Macmillan, 2015

- Collection Cambridge Imperial and Post-Colonial Studies

Présentation éditeur :

« This book brings together original, state-of-the-art historical research from several continents and examines how mainly local peasant societies responded to colonial pressures to produce a range of different commodities. It shows how they were able to subvert these processes and establish viable alternative livelihoods. In particular, it introduces the fresh concept of the ’anti-commodity’, to indicate local, sustainable forms of production steeped in values other than simply economic ones. The book will appeal to readers eager to find out more about the histories of some familiar items of everyday consumption such as rice, cotton, sugar and tobacco, as well as to those with a keen interest in the histories of African, Asian and Caribbean societies. Finally, it offers new directions in both historical and contemporary research on the continents beyond Europe. »

Sandip Hazareesingh is Research Fellow in the History Department at the Open University, UK. He is the author of The Colonial City and the Challenge of Modernity (2007), and is currently researching the interactions between peasant livelihoods, colonial policies, climate and environment in nineteenth and twentieth century western India.

Harro Maat is Sociologist and Historian of Agricultural Science and Technology at the Knowledge, Technology and Innovation group of Wageningen University, Netherlands. His main focus is on crop improvement in the colonial period and current (bio)technologies for international development in India, South-East Asia and Africa

Table of contents :

1. Rice as Commodity and Anti-Commodity
2. Yellow Tobacco, Black Tobacco : Indigenous (Desi) Tobacco as an Anti-Commodity
3. Upland and Lowland Rice in the Netherlands Indies
4. Anti-Commodity Counterpoint : Smallholder Diversity and Rural Development on the Cuban Sugar Frontier
5. ’Your Foreign Plants are Very Delicate’ : Peasant Crop Ecologies and the Subversion of Colonial Cotton Designs in Dharwar, Western India, 1830-1880
6. Sanitising Commercialisation : Health and the Politics of ’Waste’ in Colonial Punjab
7. East African Railways and Harbours 1945-60 : From ’Crisis of Accumulation’ to Labour Resistance
8. Rice, Civilisation and the Swahili Towns : Anti-Commodity and Anti-State ?
9. ’Shun the White Man’s Crop’ : Shangwe Grievances, Religious Leaders and Cotton Cultivation in North-Western Zimbabwe


Page créée le dimanche 4 octobre 2015, par Dominique Taurisson-Mouret.


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