Foreword Giorgio Riello; Preface: global networks and new histories of rice Francesca Bray; Part I. Purity and Promiscuity: Introduction Francesca Bray; 1. Global visions vs local complexity: experts wrestle with the problem of development Jonathan Harwood; 2. Rice, sugar, and livestock in Java, 1820–1940: Geertz's Agricultural Involution 50 years on Peter Boomgaard and Pieter M. Kroonenberg; 3. A desire to eat well: rice and the market in eighteenth-century China Sui-wai Cheung; 4. Rice and maritime modernity: the modern Chinese state and the South China Sea rice trade Seung-Joon Lee; 5. Promiscuous transmission and encapsulated knowledge: a material-semiotic approach to modern rice in the Mekong David Biggs; 6. Red and white rice in the vicinity of Sierra Leone: linked histories of slavery, emancipation and seed selection Bruce Mouser, Edwin Nuijten, Florent Okry and Paul Richards; Part II. Environmental Matters: Introduction Edda Fields-Black; 7. Rice on the Upper Guinea Coast: a regional perspective based on interdisciplinary sources and methods Edda Fields-Black; 8. Reserving water: environmental and technological relationships with colonial South Carolina inland rice plantations Hayden Smith; 9. Asian rice in Africa: plant genetics and crop history Erik Gilbert; 10. When Jola granaries were full Olga F. Linares; 11. Of health and harvests: seasonal mortality and commercial rice cultivation in the Punjab and Bengal regions of South Asia Lauren Minsky; Part III. Power and Control: Introduction Peter Coclanis; 12. The cultural meaning of work: the 'Black Rice Debate' reconsidered Walter Hawthorne; 13. White rice: the Midwestern origins of the modern rice industry in the United States Peter Coclanis; 14. Rice and the path of economic development in Japan Penelope Francks; 15. Commodities and anti-commodities: rice on Sumatra 1915–25 Harro Maat; Index; Bibliography.
Rice is a first step toward a history of rice and its place in capitalism from global and comparative perspectives.
Francesca Bray is Professor of Social Anthropology at the University of Edinburgh. She is the author of The Rice Economies: Technology and Development in Asian Societies (1994), Technology and Gender: Fabrics of Power in Late Imperial China (1997), Technology and Society in Ming China, 1368–1644 (2000), and Technology, Gender and History in Imperial China: Great Transformations Reconsidered (2013). Peter A. Coclanis is Albert R. Newsome Distinguished Professor of History and director of the Global Research Institute at the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill. He is the author of The Shadow of a Dream: Economic Life and Death in the South Carolina Low Country, 1670–1920 (1989) and Time's Arrow, Time's Cycle: Globalization in South East Asia over la Longue Durée (2006), and the co-editor of Environmental Change and Agricultural Sustainability in the Mekong Delta (with Mart A. Stewart, 2011). Edda L. Fields-Black is Associate Professor of History at Carnegie Mellon University, Pennsylvania. She is the author of Deep Roots: Rice Farmers in West Africa and the African Diaspora (2008). Dagmar Schaefer is director of the Centre for Chinese Studies and Professor of Chinese Studies at the University of Manchester. She is the author of The Emperor's Silk Clothes: State-Run Silk Manufacturing in the Ming Period, 1368–1644 (1998) and The Crafting of the 10,000 Things: Knowledge and Technology in 17th-Century China (2011), and the co-author of Weaving an Economic Pattern in Ming Times, 1368–1644 (with Dieter Kuhn, 2002).
'To see the world in a grain of rice! Beyond mere matters of taste,
rice is possibly the world's most important food crop. Its
cultivation and consumption have affected vast areas of Asia,
Africa, and the Americas, not to mention the billions who rely on
it as their principal dietary staple. We reflexively think of rice
as the food of Asia par excellence, but since the voyages of
Columbus, the African contributions - with an ancient and
independently domesticated rice species - have played no small part
in the history of the Americas. This is a story of globalization:
rice's geographical reach is worldwide, its histories complex and
deep. Now, Rice: Global Networks and New Histories brings together
scholarship that recovers in one peerless volume the modern history
of a truly global crop.' Judith Carney, University of California,
Los Angeles
'The editors of this volume have gathered expert voices from across
the spectrum of study, and together they have painted a dynamic
portrait of the world's most important food. In so doing, they have
shown us once again that rice is more than just rice. It is a
powerful force that shapes societies and landscapes, a tool wielded
across centuries and on every agricultural continent. Even as some
of this book's histories reach into the deep past, their words are
sharply relevant to the questions of food production and culture in
the twenty-first century.' Lisa M. Hamilton, author of Deeply
Rooted: Unconventional Farmers in the Age of Agribusiness
'A stunningly sophisticated and comprehensive examination of the
worldwide peregrinations of rice - its genes, its growers, its
merchants, its consumers, and its cultural effects. As a model, or
arguably the world's most important staple - both materially and
symbolically - wheat and maize can only dream of a day when they
too will have a volume that does them such justice.' James C.
Scott, Co-Director, Program in Agrarian Studies, Yale
University
'Reflecting a good balance of experts on rice production and
consumption, the contributors incorporate innovative approaches and
collaborations in their research, considering, for example, plant
genetics, paleohydrology, and historical linguistics. Of benefit
not only to those interested in environmental and economic history,
this comprehensive book provides another tool for those making
policy decisions around food security and sustainable development
through its illumination of the social, environmental, and economic
history of this vital grain. Summing up: essential.' E. G.
Harrington, Choice
'This substantial and informative work aims to construct and
articulate a nuanced appreciation of rice, as traded commodity or
local staple, connected across its diverse geophysical, ecological
and human settings … I recommend the work to all who are
practically concerned with rice or food security … It is often said
that one cannot claim to be seriously engaged with a crop until one
has woken up from dreaming that one was re-embodied as a crop plant
in the ground. This book will provide much material to invigorate,
contextualize and add vivid colour to such dreams.' Food
Security
'Rice features a dazzling variety of methodologies and employs them
in an eclectic collection of case studies. Different essays
consider quantitative correlations, compare DNA structures from
different strains of rice, and make use of historical linguistics,
in a truly interdisciplinary collection that includes the work of
historians, anthropologists, agricultural scientists, historians of
science, and area studies scholars.' Agricultural History
![]() |
Ask a Question About this Product More... |
![]() |