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OverviewIn 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. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Maan BaruaPublisher: Duke University Press Imprint: Duke University Press Weight: 0.454kg ISBN: 9781478025610ISBN 10: 1478025611 Pages: 312 Publication Date: 30 August 2024 Audience: College/higher education , Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print ![]() This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us. Table of ContentsReviews“Rigorously researched and carefully argued, Maan Barua’s book is an important contribution to several overlapping fields: environmental history, political ecology, and conservation policy. It rests on a formidable knowledge of the uplands of eastern India, of its plants, animals, and rivers, of its varied human communities and their complicated and contested histories. The book effectively bridges worlds usually seen as separate and even opposed: the colonial and the postcolonial, biological science and humanistic scholarship, people and animals.” -- Ramachandra Guha, author of * How Much Should a Person Consume?: Environmentalism in India and the United States * “Rigorously researched and carefully argued, Maan Barua’s book is an important contribution to several overlapping fields: environmental history, political ecology, and conservation policy. It rests on a formidable knowledge of the uplands of eastern India, of its plants, animals, and rivers, of its varied human communities and their complicated and contested histories. The book effectively bridges worlds usually seen as separate and even opposed: the colonial and the postcolonial, biological science and humanistic scholarship, people and animals.” -- Ramachandra Guha, author of * How Much Should a Person Consume?: Environmentalism in India and the United States * “Plantation Worlds is a vital recalibration of some of the predominant ideas about the interrelationships among the environment, nature, human, and nonhuman life. In an often remarkable intersection of ethnography, botany, zoology, political theory, and history, Maan Barua makes a much-needed contribution to a vast range of concerns, from decoloniality and theory from the global South to environmental transformation, human-nonhuman relations, and ontology.” -- AbdouMaliq Simone, author of * The Surrounds: Urban Life within and beyond Capture * “Rigorously researched and carefully argued, Maan Barua’s book is an important contribution to several overlapping fields: environmental history, political ecology, and conservation policy. It rests on a formidable knowledge of the uplands of eastern India, of its plants, animals, and rivers, of its varied human communities and their complicated and contested histories. The book effectively bridges worlds usually seen as separate and even opposed: the colonial and the postcolonial, biological science and humanistic scholarship, people and animals.” -- Ramachandra Guha, author of * How Much Should a Person Consume? Environmentalism in India and the United States * “Plantation Worlds is a vital recalibration of some of the predominant ideas about the interrelationships among the environment, nature, human, and nonhuman life. In an often remarkable intersection of ethnography, botany, zoology, political theory, and history, Maan Barua makes a much-needed contribution to a vast range of concerns, from decoloniality and theory from the Global South to environmental transformation, human-nonhuman relations, and ontology.” -- AbdouMaliq Simone, author of * The Surrounds: Urban Life within and beyond Capture * Author InformationMaan Barua is University Lecturer in Human Geography at the University of Cambridge and author of Lively Cities: Reconfiguring Urban Ecology. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |