Plantation Worlds

aw_product_id: 
39849382003
merchant_image_url: 
merchant_category: 
Books
search_price: 
22.99
book_author_name: 
Maan Barua
book_type: 
Paperback
publisher: 
Duke University Press
published_date: 
30/08/2024
isbn: 
9781478025610
Merchant Product Cat path: 
Books > Science, Technology & Medicine > Earth sciences, geography, environment & planning > Geography > Human geography
specifications: 
Maan Barua|Paperback|Duke University Press|30/08/2024
Merchant Product Id: 
9781478025610
Book Description: 
In Plantation Worlds, Maan Barua interrogates debates on planetary transformations through the histories and ecologies of plantations. Drawing on long-term research spanning fifteen years, Barua presents a unique ethnography attentive to the lives of both people and elephants amid tea plantations in the Indian state of Assam. In the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, nearly three million people were brought in to Assam’s plantations to work under conditions of indenture. Plantations dramatically altered the region’s landscape, plundered resources, and created fraught worlds for elephants and people. Their extractive logics and colonial legacies prevail as durations, forging the ambit of infrastructures, labor, habitability, and conservation in the present. And yet, as the perspectives of the Adivasi plantation worker community and lifeworlds of elephants show, possibilities for enacting a decolonial imaginary of landscape remain present amid immiseration. From the margins of the Global South, Barua offers an alternative grammar for articulating environmental change. In so doing, he prompts a rethinking of multispecies ecologies and how they are structured by colonialism and race.

Graphic Design by Ishmael Annobil /  Web Development by Ruzanna Hovasapyan