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Seeds of Empire: Colonialism and Crop Exchange in Global Agriculture MTA
The role of empire, trade, and botanical exchange in shaping modern crops and farming practices
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About this book:

Seeds of Empire: Colonialism and Crop Exchange in Global Agriculture *Seeds of Empire* explores the profound role of European imperialism in shaping modern global agriculture through the systematic exchange, classification, and exploitation of botanical resources. The book traces how seeds and cuttings were moved across oceans as instruments of statecraft, escorted by botanists and merchants to be trialed in a vast network of colonial botanical gardens, such as Kew and Calcutta. This "botanic empire" reorganized global ecologies by converting diverse landscapes into regimented plantation monocultures for export crops like sugar, coffee, tea, rubber, and cotton. These transformations were predicated on the extraction of Indigenous ecological expertise and the mobilization of forced or indentured labor, establishing the foundations of the modern capitalist food system.

The narrative details how specific commodities fueled imperial expansion while creating lasting social and ecological consequences. The plantation is reframed as a technology of governance that prioritized economic simplification, leading to long-term soil exhaustion and the rapid spread of pests and blights. To manage these biological risks, empires developed the scaffolding of modern agronomy: plant breeding, quarantine regimes, and international biosecurity protocols. These institutions sought to standardize nature, turning living diversity into regulated property through taxonomy and early patent laws.

In the postcolonial era, the book argues that the infrastructures of empire—railways, research stations, and commodity boards—continued to dictate agricultural paths for newly independent nations. The subsequent Green Revolution intensified this trajectory by promoting high-yielding, input-dependent varieties that further marginalized traditional peasant seed systems. While these advancements increased calorie production, they also deepened the reliance on a narrow genetic base and synthetic inputs, reinforcing a cycle of ecological and economic vulnerability.

The final chapters examine the current movement toward decolonizing agriculture in the face of climate change. By emphasizing seed sovereignty, agroecology, and the revalidation of Indigenous knowledge, the book suggests a shift away from imperial models of extraction toward resilient, community-led food systems. Ultimately, *Seeds of Empire* posits that the crops on our plates are not neutral commodities but historical legacies, and that the future of global food security depends on dismantling the persistent inequalities inherited from the botanic empire.

What You'll Find Inside:
  • The 'Botanic Empire' Framework: How colonial botanical gardens like Kew and Calcutta functioned as global switchboards to engineer the movement of strategic crops for imperial profit.
  • Appropriation of Indigenous Knowledge: The critical role of local expertise in the successful transfer of plants like cinchona and tea, and how this knowledge was often extracted and renamed by colonial science.
  • The Plantation Machine: An analysis of how crops like sugar, rubber, and bananas created 'company-states' and fueled coercive labor systems, including slavery and indenture.
  • Ecologies of Monoculture: The environmental and biological risks inherent in large-scale uniform farming, leading to catastrophic pest outbreaks and the invention of modern biosecurity and quarantine regimes.
  • Postcolonial Legacies and Decolonization: How modern agriculture still operates on inherited imperial infrastructures and the ongoing movement toward seed sovereignty and agroecological resilience in a warming world.
Who's It For:

This book is intended for historians, agronomists, and students of international development who are interested in the intersection of biology and geopolitics. It will especially benefit policymakers and environmental activists seeking to understand the historical roots of current global food systems and the challenges of decolonizing agricultural trade. Readers interested in the social and ecological impacts of globalization will find the detailed crop biographies particularly insightful.

Author:

Justin Thompson

Published By:

MixCache.com


Date Published:

January 15, 2026

Word Count:

83,930 words

Reading Time:

5 hours 53 minutes

Sample:

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