Plantation Knowledge: Agricultural Colonization, Exploitation, and Exchange Since 1500

Author:   Nicholas B. Miller ,  Ulrike Lindner (University of Cologne)
Publisher:   State University of New York Press
ISBN:  

9798855803792


Pages:   352
Publication Date:   02 April 2026
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   Not yet available   Availability explained
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Plantation Knowledge: Agricultural Colonization, Exploitation, and Exchange Since 1500


Overview

The first book to examine plantations in their global variations through the history of knowledge. Few institutions feature as prominently in contemporary notions of colonialism, racism, and environmental degradation as the modern plantation. The racialized plantations of the Atlantic World loom large in the public imagination, namely those of the British Caribbean and the US South. Yet, the plantation has proliferated into the Information Age and has continued to expand across the tropical zone of our planet, surviving the abolition of slavery, the collapse of European empires, and the challenge of generations of anti-colonial thinkers. To grasp how the plantation has spread and evolved in our modern world, this volume studies what it terms plantation knowledge, or the types of expertise, experience, and information processing that have made and continue to make plantations possible. Drawing on case studies including Ireland, Mexico, Mississippi, Hawaiʻi, India, Malaysia, the Philippines, Cuba, Brazil, and Central Africa, it examines the global spread of the plantation; the diverse people, beings, and forms of knowledge intertwined with this process; and the elasticity and durability of the plantation as a mode of commercial agriculture.

Full Product Details

Author:   Nicholas B. Miller ,  Ulrike Lindner (University of Cologne)
Publisher:   State University of New York Press
Imprint:   State University of New York Press
Weight:   0.490kg
ISBN:  

9798855803792


Pages:   352
Publication Date:   02 April 2026
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  College/higher education ,  Professional & Vocational ,  Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Forthcoming
Availability:   Not yet available   Availability explained
This item is yet to be released. You can pre-order this item and we will dispatch it to you upon its release.

Table of Contents

List of Illustrations Acknowledgments Introduction: Plantation Knowledge: Concept, History, and Research Nicholas B. Miller and Ulrike Lindner Part I: Epistemology 1. Between Irish Plantation and the Plantation Complex: The Down Survey (1654–1658), Projecting, and the Origins of Political Arithmetic Ted McCormick 2. The Badianus Herbal and Forced Indigenous Labor: Art, Land, and Nahua Knowledge in Sixteenth-Century Central Mexico Jennifer R. Saracino Part II: Boundaries 3. Sugar and Sovereignty in Hawai'i: John Adams Kuakini Cummins and Waimānalo Plantation, 1878–1895 Nicholas B. Miller 4. Experimental Paternalism: An Owenite Plantation in Mississippi, 1820–1870 Claudia Roesch Part III: Experiments 5. Revisiting the Charduar Plantation: Local Connections, Imperial Portfolios, and the Global Pathways of Assam Rubber Moritz von Brescius 6. Sugar in Province Wellesley: Converging Streams of Plantation Knowledge in Nineteenth-Century Malaya Christina Skott Part IV: Institutionalization 7. Cocoa and Coercion: Connected Histories of Sao Tome and the Belgian Congo Marta Macedo 8. Copra and Conquest: Penal Colonies and Botanical Knowledge in the American Colonial Philippines Theresa Ventura Part V: Reform 9. Cane Farmers Versus Sugar Factories in Post-Emancipation Era Cuba and Brazil Gillian McGillivray 10. Managing Regulation: Changes of Policy and Continuities of Practice on Indian Tea Plantations, 1901–1931 Rebekah McCallum List of Contributors Index

Reviews

""Plantation Knowledge expertly illustrates how plantations around the world have historically functioned not just as engines of wealth creation but also as sites of knowledge production. It also shows how plantations have survived, even thrived, over the past five hundred years precisely because their owners have adapted them to fit changing moral norms around slavery and racism. Indeed, reading this volume one walks away with a much richer understanding of what a 'plantation' is: not a relic of a bygone era of slavery and racism but a dynamic system of labor exploitation and capital accumulation that continues to thrive by adapting to shifting social norms and changing economic environments."" — Eric Herschthal, University of Utah


Author Information

Nicholas B. Miller is Associate Professor of History at Flagler College. He is the author of John Millar and the Scottish Enlightenment: Family Life and World History and editor of Cameralism and the Enlightenment: Happiness, Governance and Reform in Transnational Perspective. Ulrike Lindner is Professor of Modern History at the University of Cologne. She is the author of Koloniale Begegnungen: Deutschland und Großbritannien als Imperialmächte in Afrika 1880–1914 and editor of Bonded Labour: Global and Comparative Perspectives (18th–21st Century).

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